Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2012;7(6):e39507. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0039507. Epub 2012 Jun 27.
Obesity is a growing problem in lower income countries particularly among women. There are few studies exploring individual socioeconomic status indicators in depth. This study examines the interaction of education and wealth in relation to obesity, hypothesising that education protects against the obesogenic effect of wealth.
Four datasets of women of reproductive age from the Egyptian Demographic and Health Surveys spanning the period 1992-2008 are used to examine two distinct time periods: 1992/95 (N = 11097) and 2005/08 (N = 23178). The association in the two time periods between education level and household wealth in relation to the odds of being obese is examined, and the interaction between the two socioeconomic indicators investigated. Estimates are adjusted for age group and area of residence.
An interaction was found between the association of education and wealth with obesity in both time periods (P-value for interaction <0.001). For women with the lowest education level, moving up one wealth quintile was associated with a 78% increase in the odds of obesity in 1992/95 (OR; 95%CI: 1.78; 1.65,1.91) and a 33% increase in 2005/08 (OR; 95%CI: 1.33; 1.26,1.39). For women with the highest level of education, there was little evidence of an association between wealth and obesity (OR; 95%CI: 0.82; 0.57,1.16 in 1992/95 and 0.95; 0.84,1.08 in 2005/08). Obesity levels increased most in women who were in the no/primary education, poorest wealth quintile and rural groups (absolute difference in prevalence percentage points between the two time periods: 20.2, 20.1, and 21.3 respectively).
In the present study, wealth appears to be a risk factor for obesity in women with lower education levels, while women with higher education are protected. The findings also suggest that a reversal in the social distribution of obesity risk is occurring which can be explained by the large increase in obesity levels in lower socioeconomic groups between the two time periods.
肥胖是低收入国家日益严重的问题,尤其是在女性中。很少有研究深入探讨个体社会经济地位指标。本研究检验了教育和财富之间的相互作用与肥胖的关系,假设教育可以防止财富对肥胖的影响。
利用 1992-2008 年期间埃及人口与健康调查的四个育龄妇女数据集,考察了两个不同时期:1992/95 年(N=11097)和 2005/08 年(N=23178)。在这两个时期,研究了教育水平与家庭财富与肥胖几率之间的关系,并考察了这两个社会经济指标之间的相互作用。估计结果调整了年龄组和居住地区。
在两个时期都发现了教育与财富与肥胖之间的相互作用(交互作用的 P 值<0.001)。对于受教育程度最低的妇女,上升一个财富五分位数与肥胖几率增加 78%相关,在 1992/95 年(OR;95%CI:1.78;1.65,1.91)和 2005/08 年增加 33%(OR;95%CI:1.33;1.26,1.39)。对于受教育程度最高的妇女,财富与肥胖之间几乎没有关联(1992/95 年的 OR;95%CI:0.82;0.57,1.16 和 2005/08 年的 0.95;0.84,1.08)。在处于无/小学教育、最贫穷的财富五分位数和农村群体的妇女中,肥胖水平增加最多(两个时期之间的流行率百分比差异绝对值分别为 20.2、20.1 和 21.3)。
在本研究中,财富似乎是教育程度较低的女性肥胖的危险因素,而教育程度较高的女性则受到保护。研究结果还表明,肥胖风险的社会分布正在发生逆转,这可以解释两个时期之间较低社会经济群体肥胖水平的大幅增加。