Nie Jason X, Ardern Chris I
School of Kinesiology and Health Science, York University, Bethune College, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
PLoS One. 2014 Sep 15;9(9):e107548. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0107548. eCollection 2014.
To quantify and compare the association between the World Health Organizations' Asian-specific trigger points for public health action ['increased risk': body mass index (BMI) ≥23 kg/m2, and; 'high risk': BMI ≥27.5 kg/m2] with self-reported cardiovascular-related conditions in Asian-Canadian sub-groups.
Six cycles of the Canadian Community Health Survey (2001-2009) were pooled to examine BMI and health in Asian sub-groups (South Asians, Chinese, Filipino, Southeast Asians, Arabs, West Asians, Japanese and Korean; N = 18 794 participants, ages 18-64 y). Multivariable logistic regression, adjusting for demographic, lifestyle characteristics and acculturation measures, was used to estimate the odds of cardiovascular-related health (high blood pressure, heart disease, diabetes, 'at least one cardiometabolic condition') outcomes across all eight Asian sub-groups.
Compared to South Asians (OR = 1.00), Filipinos had higher odds of having 'at least one cardiometabolic condition' (OR = 1.29, 95% CI: 1.04-1.62), whereas Chinese (0.63, 0.474-0.9) and Arab-Canadians had lower odds (0.38, 0.28-0.51). In ethnic-specific analyses (with 'acceptable' risk weight as the referent), 'increased' and 'high' risk weight categories were the most highly associated with 'at least one cardiometabolic condition' in Chinese ('increased': 3.6, 2.34-5.63; 'high': 8.9, 3.6-22.01). Compared to normal weight South Asians, being in the 'high' risk weight category in all but the Southeast Asian, Arab, and Japanese ethnic groups was associated with approximately 3-times the likelihood of having 'at least one cardiometabolic condition'.
Differences in the association between obesity and cardiometabolic health risks were seen among Asian sub-groups in Canada. The use of WHO's lowered Asian-specific BMI cut-offs identified obesity-related risks in South Asian, Filipino and Chinese sub-groups that would have been masked by traditional BMI categories. These findings have implications for public health messaging, especially for ethnic groups at higher odds of obesity-related health risks.
量化并比较世界卫生组织针对亚洲人群设定的公共卫生行动触发点(“风险增加”:体重指数(BMI)≥23kg/m²;“高风险”:BMI≥27.5kg/m²)与加拿大亚裔亚组自我报告的心血管相关疾病之间的关联。
汇总加拿大社区健康调查的六个周期(2001 - 2009年)的数据,以研究亚洲亚组(南亚人、华人、菲律宾人、东南亚人、阿拉伯人、西亚人、日本人及韩国人;N = 18794名参与者,年龄18 - 64岁)的BMI与健康状况。采用多变量逻辑回归分析,对人口统计学、生活方式特征及文化适应指标进行调整,以估计所有八个亚洲亚组中心血管相关健康结局(高血压、心脏病、糖尿病、“至少一种心血管代谢疾病”)的患病几率。
与南亚人相比(比值比(OR)= 1.00),菲律宾人患“至少一种心血管代谢疾病”的几率更高(OR = 1.29,95%置信区间:1.04 - 1.62),而华人(0.63,0.474 - 0.9)和加拿大阿拉伯人患病几率较低(0.38,0.28 - 0.51)。在特定族裔分析中(以“可接受”风险权重为参照),“风险增加”和“高风险”权重类别与华人中“至少一种心血管代谢疾病”的关联最为显著(“风险增加”:3.6,2.34 - 5.63;“高风险”:8.9,3.6 - 22.01)。与体重正常的南亚人相比,除东南亚人、阿拉伯人和日本人族裔外,处于“高风险”体重类别的其他族裔患“至少一种心血管代谢疾病”的可能性约为其三倍。
在加拿大的亚洲亚组中,肥胖与心血管代谢健康风险之间的关联存在差异。采用世界卫生组织降低后的亚洲特定BMI临界值,可识别出南亚、菲律宾和华人亚组中与肥胖相关的风险,而这些风险在传统BMI类别中可能被掩盖。这些发现对公共卫生信息传播具有启示意义,尤其是对于肥胖相关健康风险几率较高的族裔而言。