Department of Public Health, Erasmus Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
Int J Epidemiol. 2010 Apr;39(2):392-404. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyp329. Epub 2009 Nov 19.
In Western societies, a lower educational level is often associated with a higher prevalence of overweight and obesity. However, there may be important international differences in the strength and direction of this relationship, perhaps in respect of differing levels of socio-economic development. We aimed to describe educational inequalities in overweight and obesity across Europe, and to explore the contribution of level of socio-economic development to cross-national differences in educational inequalities in overweight and obese adults in Europe.
Cross-sectional data, based on self-reports, were derived from national health interview surveys from 19 European countries (N = 127 018; age range = 25-44 years). Height and weight data were used to calculate the body mass index (BMI). Multivariate regression analysis was employed to measure educational inequalities in overweight and obesity, based on BMI. Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita was used as a measure of level of socio-economic development.
Inverse educational gradients in overweight and obesity (i.e. higher education, less overweight and obesity) are a generalized phenomenon among European men and even more so among women. Baltic and eastern European men were the exceptions, with weak positive associations between education and overweight and obesity. Educational inequalities in overweight and obesity were largest in Mediterranean women. A 10 000-euro increase in GDP was related to a 3% increase in overweight and obesity for low-educated men, but a 4% decrease for high-educated men. No associations with GDP were observed for women.
In most European countries, people of lower educational attainment are now most likely to be overweight or obese. An increasing level of socio-economic development was associated with an emergence of inequalities among men, and a persistence of these inequalities among women.
在西方社会,较低的教育水平通常与超重和肥胖的患病率较高有关。然而,这种关系的强度和方向可能存在重要的国际差异,也许是因为社会经济发展水平不同。我们旨在描述欧洲超重和肥胖的教育不平等现象,并探讨社会经济发展水平对欧洲超重和肥胖成年人教育不平等的跨国差异的贡献。
本研究基于横断面数据,来自 19 个欧洲国家的全国健康访谈调查(N=127018;年龄范围 25-44 岁)。身高和体重数据用于计算体重指数(BMI)。采用多元回归分析方法,根据 BMI 衡量超重和肥胖的教育不平等程度。人均国内生产总值(GDP)用作社会经济发展水平的衡量标准。
超重和肥胖的教育反向梯度(即高学历,较少超重和肥胖)是欧洲男性普遍存在的现象,女性更为明显。波罗的海和东欧的男性是例外,超重和肥胖与教育之间呈弱正相关。地中海地区的女性在超重和肥胖方面的教育不平等现象最大。人均 GDP 增加 10000 欧元,与低学历男性的超重和肥胖率增加 3%有关,而与高学历男性的超重和肥胖率减少 4%有关。对于女性,与 GDP 没有关联。
在大多数欧洲国家,受教育程度较低的人现在最有可能超重或肥胖。社会经济发展水平的提高与男性之间不平等的出现有关,而女性之间的这些不平等则持续存在。