Provenzano Audrey M, Rifas-Shiman Sheryl L, Herring Sharon J, Rich-Edwards Janet W, Oken Emily
1 Kraft Fellow in Community Health Leadership, Kraft Family National Center for Leadership and Training in Community Health, Harvard Medical School , Boston, Massachusetts.
2 Obesity Prevention Program, Department of Population Medicine, Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute , Boston, Massachusetts.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2015 Jul;24(7):563-71. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2014.5016. Epub 2015 Apr 22.
We examined associations of material hardship with prepregnancy body mass index (BMI), gestational weight gain (GWG), and substantial postpartum weight retention (SPPWR; ≥5 kg at 1 year).
We studied 2128 women in Project Viva, a Boston-area cohort with recruitment during1999-2002. At recruitment, women reported whether they experienced material hardship, defined as having ever received public assistance, welfare, or lacked basic necessities (food, rent, or medical care) during childhood, in adulthood before pregnancy, and/or in pregnancy. We used multivariable logistic models adjusted for age, race/ethnicity, and parity (and prepregnancy BMI for GWG and SPPWR) to examine associations of material hardship with the three weight-related outcomes (BMI, GWG, and SPPWR).
Mean age was 31.8 (standard deviation, 5.2) years; 66% of women were white, 16% were obese (prepregnancy BMI ≥30.0 kg/m(2)), 50% experienced excessive GWG, and 17% experienced SPPWR. Material hardship was most common during childhood (n=192, 9%), followed by adulthood (102, 5%), and pregnancy (41, 2%). Hardship in adulthood was associated with prepregnancy obesity (BMI ≥30 kg/m(2) vs. 18.5 to <25.0 kg/m(2)), odds ratio ([OR] 2.35, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.29, 4.31), but hardship in childhood was not (OR 1.26, 95% CI 0.80, 1.98). Hardship in childhood was associated with excess GWG (OR 1.45, 95% CI 0.99, 2.14), but hardship in adulthood or during pregnancy was not. We saw trends among hardship in each of the periods and associations with SPPWR, but all confidence intervals included the null.
The timing of hardship exposure may differently influence weight before, during, and after pregnancy.
我们研究了物质困难与孕前体重指数(BMI)、孕期体重增加(GWG)以及产后大量体重滞留(SPPWR;产后1年体重增加≥5千克)之间的关联。
我们对“活力计划”中的2128名女性进行了研究,该计划是一项在1999年至2002年期间于波士顿地区招募人群的队列研究。在招募时,女性报告她们是否经历过物质困难,物质困难定义为在童年时期、怀孕前的成年期以及/或者孕期曾接受过公共援助、福利,或者缺乏基本生活必需品(食物、房租或医疗保健)。我们使用多变量逻辑回归模型,对年龄、种族/民族和产次进行了调整(对于GWG和SPPWR,还对孕前BMI进行了调整),以研究物质困难与三个体重相关结局(BMI、GWG和SPPWR)之间的关联。
平均年龄为31.8岁(标准差为5.2岁);66%的女性为白人,16%的女性肥胖(孕前BMI≥30.0千克/平方米),50%的女性孕期体重增加过多,17%的女性产后体重大量滞留。物质困难在童年时期最为常见(n = 192,9%),其次是成年期(102人,5%)和孕期(41人,2%)。成年期的物质困难与孕前肥胖相关(BMI≥30千克/平方米与18.5至<25.0千克/平方米相比),比值比([OR] 2.35,95%置信区间[CI] 1.29,4.31),但童年时期的物质困难则不然(OR 1.26,95% CI 0.80,1.98)。童年时期经历物质困难与孕期体重增加过多相关(OR 1.45,95% CI 0.99,2.14),但成年期或孕期经历物质困难则不然。我们观察到每个时期的物质困难与产后大量体重滞留之间存在趋势及关联,但所有置信区间均包含无效值。
经历物质困难的时间可能对孕前、孕期和产后的体重产生不同影响。