Kenney Mary Kay, Wang Jing, Iannotti Ron
US Department of Health and Human Services, Health Resources and Services Administration, Maternal and Child Health Bureau, Rockville, Maryland.
J Rural Health. 2014 Winter;30(1):89-100. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12034. Epub 2013 Jun 25.
Elevated risk for obesity is found in rural environments and in some minority populations. It is unclear whether living in rural or nonmetropolitan areas and being a minority compound the risk of obesity beyond that of either factor acting alone. Our purpose was to examine adolescent obesity in light of the potential concomitant influences of race/ethnicity, residency, and obesity-related lifestyle behaviors.
We assessed obesity prevalence, physical activity, consumption of fatty snack foods, and screen time in 8,363 US adolescents based on variation in race/ethnicity and residency. Descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate statistics were used to: (1) calculate race- and residency-based rates of obesity and obesity-related lifestyle behaviors and (2) generate race- and residency-based obesity odds ratios as a function of those same behaviors.
The results indicated that nonmetropolitan black youth had the highest risk of obesity (26%), rate of consuming fatty snack foods on more than 2 days/week (86%), and rate of spending more than 2 hours/day in screen time (91%) compared to white metropolitan youth. Compared to their metropolitan counterparts, black nonmetropolitan youth had greater odds of being obese if they exercised less than daily (1.71 times), ate fatty snack foods on more than 2 days/week (1.65 times), or spent more than 2 hours/day in screen time (1.64 times).
Race/ethnicity and residency may have a compounding effect on the risk of obesity. Prevention and intervention must be viewed in a socioecological framework that recognizes the importance of culture and community on obesity-related behaviors.
在农村环境和一些少数族裔人群中发现肥胖风险升高。目前尚不清楚生活在农村或非大都市地区以及作为少数族裔是否会使肥胖风险高于单独考虑这两个因素时的风险。我们的目的是根据种族/族裔、居住地以及与肥胖相关的生活方式行为的潜在共同影响来研究青少年肥胖问题。
我们根据种族/族裔和居住地的差异,对8363名美国青少年的肥胖患病率、身体活动、高脂肪零食的摄入量以及屏幕使用时间进行了评估。使用描述性、双变量和多变量统计方法来:(1)计算基于种族和居住地的肥胖率以及与肥胖相关的生活方式行为率;(2)根据这些相同行为生成基于种族和居住地的肥胖比值比。
结果表明,与大都市白人青少年相比,非大都市黑人青少年肥胖风险最高(26%),每周超过2天食用高脂肪零食的比例(86%),以及每天屏幕使用时间超过2小时的比例(91%)。与大都市的同龄人相比,如果非大都市黑人青少年每天锻炼少于一次(肥胖几率为1.71倍)、每周超过2天食用高脂肪零食(肥胖几率为1.65倍)或每天屏幕使用时间超过2小时(肥胖几率为1.64倍),那么他们肥胖的几率更高。
种族/族裔和居住地可能对肥胖风险产生复合影响。预防和干预必须在社会生态框架内进行,该框架认识到文化和社区对与肥胖相关行为的重要性。