M.E. Hoque, K.Z. Long, and A. Al Mamun are with the School of Population Health, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia. K.Z. Long is with the Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Basel, Switzerland. L.W. Niessen is with the Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. L.W. Niessen is with the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, Liverpool, UK.
Nutr Rev. 2015 Jul;73(7):438-47. doi: 10.1093/nutrit/nuv003. Epub 2015 Apr 22.
Studies show there is a double burden of underweight and overweight in Bangladesh amidst a global background of increasing rates of overweight in low-income settings.
The aim of this review was to determine the rates of change in the prevalence of underweight and of overweight among Bangladeshi women of reproductive age, to investigate whether there has been a shift from underweight to overweight in this population, and, if a shift was documented, to identify potential determinants.
Data was obtained via electronic searches of the PubMed, CINAHL, and Embase databases.
Studies and survey reports were eligible for inclusion if they provided data on the prevalence of underweight and of overweight among women of reproductive age as well as sociodemographic information.
A meta-analysis was performed by reviewing data extracted from the included studies. Using data from 5 successive national demographic and health surveys, the average annual rates of change in underweight and in overweight were calculated, along with their associations with potential determinants.
In Bangladesh, the prevalence of overweight exceeded that of underweight in 2014. A higher average annual rate of reduction of underweight was found among wealthier, highly educated, urban-living women, while a higher average annual rate of increase of overweight was found among poorer, uneducated, rural-living women. The shift in body mass index from underweight to overweight was most positively associated with urban residence, age, higher socioeconomic status, and higher education attainment.
在低收入环境中超重率不断上升的全球背景下,研究表明孟加拉国存在体重不足和超重的双重负担。
本综述旨在确定孟加拉国育龄妇女体重不足和超重的流行率变化情况,调查该人群中是否存在从体重不足向超重的转变,如果有转变,确定潜在的决定因素。
通过对 PubMed、CINAHL 和 Embase 数据库的电子检索获得数据。
如果研究和调查报告提供了关于育龄妇女体重不足和超重流行率以及社会人口学信息的数据,则有资格纳入。
通过审查纳入研究中提取的数据进行荟萃分析。使用连续 5 次国家人口与健康调查的数据,计算了体重不足和超重的平均年变化率及其与潜在决定因素的关联。
2014 年,孟加拉国超重的流行率超过体重不足。在较富裕、受教育程度较高、居住在城市的妇女中,体重不足的平均年减少率较高,而在较贫穷、未受教育、居住在农村的妇女中,超重的平均年增加率较高。体重指数从体重不足到超重的转变与城市居住、年龄、较高的社会经济地位和较高的教育程度呈正相关。