Center for Health and Community, The University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Int J Obes (Lond). 2012 Aug;36(8):1114-20. doi: 10.1038/ijo.2011.179. Epub 2011 Sep 13.
Overweight prevalence has increased globally; however, current time trends of overweight prevalence by social class in lower income countries have not been fully explored.
We used repeated cross-sectional, nationally representative data from the Demographic and Health Surveys on women aged 18-49 years with young children (n=421,689) in 39 lower-income countries. We present overweight (body mass index ≥ 25 kg m⁻²) prevalence at each survey wave, prevalence difference and prevalence growth rate for each country over time, separately by wealth quintile and educational attainment. We present the correlation between nation wealth and differential overweight prevalence growth by wealth and education.
In the majority of countries, the highest wealth and education groups still have the highest prevalence of overweight and obesity. However, in a substantial number of countries (14% when wealth is used as the indicator of socioeconomic status and 28% for education) the estimated increases in overweight prevalence over time have been greater in the lowest- compared with the highest-wealth and -education groups. Gross domestic product per capita was associated with a higher overweight prevalence growth rate for the lowest-wealth group compared with the highest (Pearson's correlation coefficient: 0.45).
Higher (vs lower) wealth and education groups had higher overweight prevalence across most developing countries. However, some countries show a faster growth rate in overweight in the lowest- (vs highest-) wealth and -education groups, which is indicative of an increasing burden of overweight among lower wealth and education groups in the lower-income countries.
超重的患病率在全球范围内有所增加;然而,目前还没有充分探讨低收入国家社会阶层超重患病率的当前时间趋势。
我们使用来自 39 个低收入国家的具有年幼子女的 18-49 岁女性的人口与健康调查的重复横断面、全国代表性数据。我们分别按财富五分位数和教育程度呈现每个调查波次的超重(体重指数≥25kg/m²)患病率、患病率差异和患病率增长率。我们呈现了国家财富与按财富和教育程度划分的超重患病率增长差异之间的相关性。
在大多数国家,最富有和受教育程度最高的群体仍然超重和肥胖的患病率最高。然而,在相当多的国家(当使用财富作为社会经济地位的指标时为 14%,而当使用教育程度时为 28%),超重患病率随时间的增长在最低财富和教育群体中比在最高财富和教育群体中更高。人均国内生产总值与最低财富群体的超重患病率增长率较高(Pearson 相关系数:0.45)相比最高财富群体。
在大多数发展中国家,较高(而非较低)的财富和教育群体的超重患病率较高。然而,一些国家在最低(而非最高)财富和教育群体中显示出超重增长率更快,这表明低收入国家中较低财富和教育群体的超重负担正在增加。