University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, School of Public Health, Brownsville Regional Campus, USA.
Child Obes. 2012 Oct;8(5):449-54. doi: 10.1089/chi.2011.0094.
Early childhood obesity, like other health disparities, disproportionately affects low-income populations. The purpose of this study is to determine the association between maternal sociodemographic factors and child overweight and obesity in a sample of low-income Mexican Americans.
The current study is a secondary analysis of baseline data that were collected as part of a longitudinal study of 374 children aged 12-24 months receiving Women, Infants, and Children (WIC) services in a large metropolitan area in central/south Texas.Measures used in this secondary analysis were: Measured weight and height of the child and mother to calculate weight-for-stature and BMI, respectively; maternal sociodemographic variables (age, education, marital status, employment status, and nativity); maternal acculturation level; and child breastfed status. Descriptive statistics are reported as frequencies, percentages, means, and standard deviations (SD). Chi-squared Fisher exact tests assessed differences in maternal factors by child weight (healthy weight and overweight). Odds ratios (OR), 95% confidence intervals (CI), and levels of significance are reported.
Of the 372 mothers, most were young (mean age 26.1 years, SD = 6.1), 47.3% had graduated high school, 33.6% were employed at the time of the study, and 72.1% were U.S. born. No significant differences were observed for the maternal factors by child weight-for-stature z-score. However, maternal BMI statistically differed by child weight. Healthy weight mothers were more likely to have healthy weight children than overweight mothers. Maternal nativity and maternal acculturation were not statistically associated with child weight in this sample of low-income Mexican Americans.
The findings of the current study reinforce the importance of addressing the influence of maternal sociodemographic factors on child weight, in particular, maternal weight. A more comprehensive investigation of ecological factors' influence on obesity onset and control in young Mexican-American children is needed.
与其他健康差异一样,儿童早期肥胖也不成比例地影响低收入人群。本研究的目的是确定母亲的社会人口因素与低收入墨西哥裔美国人样本中儿童超重和肥胖之间的关联。
本研究是对基线数据的二次分析,这些数据是作为在德克萨斯州中南部一个大城市接受妇女、婴儿和儿童(WIC)服务的 374 名 12-24 个月大的儿童的纵向研究的一部分收集的。本二次分析中使用的测量包括:测量儿童和母亲的体重和身高,分别计算体重指数和 BMI;母亲的社会人口学变量(年龄、教育、婚姻状况、就业状况和原籍国);母亲的文化适应水平;以及儿童母乳喂养状况。描述性统计数据以频率、百分比、平均值和标准差(SD)报告。卡方 Fisher 精确检验评估了儿童体重(健康体重和超重)的母亲因素差异。报告了优势比(OR)、95%置信区间(CI)和显著性水平。
在 372 位母亲中,大多数年龄较小(平均年龄 26.1 岁,标准差=6.1),47.3%毕业于高中,33.6%在研究时就业,72.1%为美国出生。儿童体重-身高 z 评分的母亲因素没有观察到显著差异。然而,母亲的 BMI 确实因儿童的体重而有所不同。健康体重的母亲更有可能有健康体重的孩子,而超重的母亲则更有可能有超重的孩子。在这个低收入墨西哥裔美国人样本中,母亲的原籍国和母亲的文化适应程度与儿童的体重没有统计学上的关联。
本研究的结果强调了重视母亲社会人口因素对儿童体重的影响的重要性,特别是母亲的体重。需要更全面地研究生态因素对年轻墨西哥裔美国儿童肥胖症发病和控制的影响。