Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Erasmus MC-University Medical Center Rotterdam, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2013 Jul 23;8(7):e69676. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069676. Print 2013.
Socioeconomic inequalities in longitudinal patterning of childhood overweight could cause marked differentials in total burden by adulthood. This study aims to determine timing and strength of the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and children's body mass index (BMI) in the pre- and primary school years, and to examine socioeconomic differences in overweight trajectories across childhood.
Participants were 4949 children from the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children. BMI was measured at four biennial waves starting at age 4-5 years in 2004. Developmental trajectories of childhood overweight were identified with latent class analyses. Composite variables of family and neighbourhood SES were used.
Socioeconomic differences in mean BMI z-scores already present at age 4-5 more than doubled by age 10-11 years, reflecting decreasing mean BMI among advantaged rather than increasing means among disadvantaged children. Latent class analysis identified children with 'stable normal weight' (68%), and with 'persistent' (15%), 'late-onset' (14%), and 'resolving' overweight (3%). Risks of persistent and late-onset childhood overweight were highest among low SES families (e.g. most disadvantaged quintile: OR(persistent) = 2.51, 95%CI: 1.83-3.43), and only partly explained by birth weight and parental overweight. Relationships with neighbourhood SES were weaker and attenuated fully on adjustment for family SES. No socioeconomic gradient was observed for resolving overweight.
Childhood has become the critical period when socioeconomic inequalities in overweight emerge and strengthen. Although targeting disadvantaged children with early overweight must be a top priority, the presence of childhood overweight even among less-disadvantaged families suggests only whole-society approaches will eliminate overweight-associated morbidity.
儿童超重的纵向模式存在社会经济不平等,这可能导致成年后总负担的显著差异。本研究旨在确定社会经济地位(SES)与儿童在学前和小学阶段的 BMI 之间的关联的时间和强度,并检查儿童期超重轨迹的社会经济差异。
参与者是来自澳大利亚儿童纵向研究的 4949 名儿童。BMI 在 2004 年 4 至 5 岁时的四个两年期波次进行测量。使用潜在类别分析确定儿童超重的发展轨迹。使用家庭和社区 SES 的综合变量。
4-5 岁时已经存在的平均 BMI z 分数的社会经济差异在 10-11 岁时增加了一倍多,反映了优势儿童的平均 BMI 下降,而不是劣势儿童的平均值上升。潜在类别分析确定了具有“稳定正常体重”(68%)、“持续”(15%)、“晚发”(14%)和“解决”超重(3%)的儿童。低 SES 家庭中持续和晚发儿童超重的风险最高(例如最不利五分位数:OR(持续)=2.51,95%CI:1.83-3.43),并且仅部分由出生体重和父母超重解释。与社区 SES 的关系较弱,并且在调整家庭 SES 后完全减弱。对于解决超重,没有观察到社会经济梯度。
儿童期已成为超重的社会经济不平等出现和加剧的关键时期。尽管针对早期超重的弱势儿童必须是重中之重,但即使在不太弱势的家庭中也存在超重,这表明只有全社会的方法才能消除与超重相关的发病率。