Department of Economics, Lund University, PO Box 7082, SE-220 07 Lund, Sweden.
Soc Sci Med. 2012 Jul;75(1):109-19. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2012.03.003. Epub 2012 Mar 30.
Increasing obesity rates and corresponding public health problems are well-known, and disparities across socioeconomic groups are frequently reported. However, the literature is less clear on whether the increasing trends are specific to certain socioeconomic groups and whether disparities in obesity are increasing or decreasing over time. This knowledge sheds light on the understanding of the driving forces to the ongoing worldwide increases in obesity and body-mass index and gives guidance to plausible interventions aiming at reverting weights back to healthy levels. The purpose of this study is to explore long-term time trends and socioeconomic disparities in body-mass index and obesity among U.S. adults. Individual level data from ten cycles of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey between 1960 and 2008 are used to estimate adjusted time trends in the probabilities of obesity and severe obesity and in measured body-mass index for three racial/ethnical groups, for three educational groups, and for four levels of income, stratified by gender. Time trends in the probabilities of obesity and severe obesity are estimated by linear probability models, and trends at the 15th, 50th and 85th percentiles of the adjusted body-mass index distribution are estimated by quantile regression. Divergent time trends for the different socioeconomic groups are estimated by interaction terms between socioeconomic status and year. The results show that, with some exceptions, increases in both obesity, severe obesity and body-mass index are similar across the different racial/ethnic, educational and income groups. We conclude that the increase in body-mass index and obesity in the United States is a true epidemic, whose signal hallmark is to have affected an entire society. Accordingly, a whole-society approach is likely to be required if the increasing trends are to be reversed.
肥胖率不断上升和相应的公共卫生问题是众所周知的,社会经济群体之间的差异也经常被报道。然而,文献对于这些上升趋势是否特定于某些社会经济群体,以及肥胖差异是否随着时间的推移而增加或减少,并没有明确的说明。这些知识有助于理解导致全球肥胖和体重指数持续上升的驱动因素,并为旨在将体重恢复到健康水平的合理干预措施提供指导。本研究旨在探讨美国成年人的体重指数和肥胖的长期时间趋势和社会经济差异。利用 1960 年至 2008 年期间进行的 10 次全国健康和营养调查的个人水平数据,我们估计了三种种族/民族群体、三个教育群体和四个收入水平的男性和女性中肥胖和重度肥胖的概率以及测量体重指数的调整时间趋势。通过线性概率模型估计肥胖和重度肥胖的概率的时间趋势,通过分位数回归估计调整体重指数分布的第 15、50 和 85 百分位数的趋势。通过社会经济地位和年份之间的交互项来估计不同社会经济群体的时间趋势差异。结果表明,除了一些例外情况,不同种族/民族、教育和收入群体的肥胖、重度肥胖和体重指数都呈上升趋势。我们得出的结论是,美国体重指数和肥胖的增加是一场真正的流行病,其显著特征是影响了整个社会。因此,如果要扭转这种上升趋势,可能需要采取全社会的方法。