Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Eur J Clin Nutr. 2011 Mar;65(3):357-67. doi: 10.1038/ejcn.2010.259. Epub 2010 Dec 22.
BACKGROUND/OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effects of body size and sociodemographic characteristics on differences between self-reported (SR) and measured anthropometric data in men and women.
SUBJECTS/METHODS: This study comprises 9933 men and 11,856 women aged 39-79 years at baseline survey (1993-1997) in the EPIC-Norfolk study (Norfolk arm of the European Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition Study). The effects of sex, measured height, weight, age group, educational level and social class on differences between SR and measured weight, height, body mass index (BMI), waist, hip and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) were examined.
There were systematic differences between SR and measured anthropometric measurements by sex, measured height, weight and sociodemographic characteristics. Height was overestimated in both sexes while weight, waist, hip, and consequently, BMI and WHR were underestimated. Being male, shorter, heavier, older, and having no educational qualifications and manual occupation were independently associated with overreporting of height, and underreporting of weight was associated independently with being female, shorter, heavier, younger age, and higher education level and social class. Underreporting of waist circumference was strongly associated with being female and higher measured waist circumference, while underreporting of hip circumference was associated with being male and higher measured hip circumference. Furthermore, there was substantial degree of misclassification of BMI and waist circumference categories for both general and central obesity associated with SR data.
These findings suggest that errors in SR anthropometric data, especially waist and hip circumference are influenced by actual body size as well as sociodemographic characteristics. These systematic differences may influence associations between SR anthropometric measures and health outcomes in epidemiological studies.
背景/目的:研究体型和社会人口学特征对男性和女性自我报告(SR)和测量人体测量数据差异的影响。
受试者/方法:本研究包括 9933 名男性和 11856 名年龄在 39-79 岁的女性,他们在基线调查(1993-1997 年)中参加了 EPIC-Norfolk 研究(欧洲癌症与营养调查的诺福克分支)。研究考察了性别、测量身高、体重、年龄组、教育水平和社会阶层对 SR 与测量体重、身高、体重指数(BMI)、腰围、臀围和腰臀比(WHR)之间差异的影响。
性别、测量身高、体重和社会人口学特征均存在 SR 与测量人体测量值之间的系统差异。男女身高均被高估,而体重、腰围、臀围以及 BMI 和 WHR 则被低估。男性、身高较矮、体重较重、年龄较大、无学历且从事体力劳动与身高虚报独立相关,而女性、身高较矮、体重较重、年龄较小、受教育程度较高且社会阶层较高与体重虚报独立相关。腰围的低估与女性和较高的测量腰围显著相关,而臀围的低估与男性和较高的测量臀围相关。此外,SR 数据与一般肥胖和中心性肥胖相关的 BMI 和腰围分类存在较大程度的错误分类。
这些发现表明,SR 人体测量数据中的错误,尤其是腰围和臀围,不仅受实际体型影响,还受社会人口学特征的影响。这些系统差异可能会影响流行病学研究中 SR 人体测量指标与健康结果之间的关联。