Pienaar Anita E
Physical Activity, Sport and Recreation (PhaSRec), Faculty of Health Science, North- West University, Private Bag X6001, Potchefstroom, 2520 Republic of South Africa.
BMC Obes. 2015 Feb 7;2:2. doi: 10.1186/s40608-014-0030-4. eCollection 2015.
Widespread trends of increasing child obesity are reported in developing countries. This longitudinal NW-CHILD study investigated changes in overweight and obesity over a three year period among 574 children between the ages 6 and 9 (282 boys, 292 girls; 407 black, 143 white) in South Africa (SA), taking into consideration sex, race and school type. Stratified random sampling was used to identify 20 schools, across 5 school SES levels (quintiles), in 4 educational districts of the North West Province of SA. Standard anthropometric techniques and international age adjusted BMI cut-off points for children were used to determine overweight and obesity, 3-years apart. Mixed models were used to analyse the effects of sex, race and socio-economic status (SES) of the school.
Overall obesity increased over 3-years by 4% from 12.5% at baseline to 16.7% during follow-up. Obesity increased significantly in both white (4.2%) and black (2.0%) children, although overall prevalence in the final year was double (27.3%) in white children compared to black children (13.3%). Prevalence in obesity increased more in boys (3.2%) compared to girls (2.4%), although girls showed a higher overall prevalence (18.5%). SES effects were significant where children in schools associated with higher SES, had the highest rate of increase and the highest prevalence of obesity. A significant change towards an unhealthy BMI was found in 9.2% of the group over the 3-year period, although a small percentage (3.0%) also transitioned towards a healthier BMI.
Overall obesity prevalence rose significantly from 6-9-years. Obesity, compared to overweight, increased more during this period. Prevalence and rate of increase differed markedly in different sexes, race and SES, masking the extent of the problem. Shifting towards an unhealthy BMI was more common than obtaining a healthier BMI over the 3-year period. It also demonstrated the difficulty of breaking the cycle of obesity, once it had started. Early prevention strategies are needed based on the trends established in this study, with special attention to white children living in high SES regions, and black children in economic transition.
据报道,发展中国家儿童肥胖现象呈普遍增加趋势。这项纵向的西北儿童研究调查了南非574名6至9岁儿童(282名男孩,292名女孩;407名黑人,143名白人)在三年期间超重和肥胖情况的变化,同时考虑了性别、种族和学校类型。采用分层随机抽样方法,在南非西北省的4个教育区,从5个学校社会经济水平(五分位数)中确定了20所学校。使用标准人体测量技术和国际儿童年龄调整BMI切点来确定超重和肥胖情况,时间间隔为3年。采用混合模型分析学校的性别、种族和社会经济地位(SES)的影响。
总体肥胖率在3年期间从基线时的12.5%上升至随访期间的16.7%,增加了4%。白人儿童(4.2%)和黑人儿童(2.0%)的肥胖率均显著增加,尽管最后一年白人儿童的总体患病率(27.3%)是黑人儿童(13.3%)的两倍。男孩的肥胖患病率增加幅度(3.2%)高于女孩(2.4%),尽管女孩的总体患病率更高(18.5%)。SES的影响显著,与较高SES相关学校的儿童肥胖率增幅最高且患病率最高。在3年期间,该组中有9.2%的儿童BMI向不健康方向有显著变化,不过也有一小部分(3.0%)儿童的BMI向更健康方向转变。
6至9岁儿童的总体肥胖患病率显著上升。在此期间,与超重相比,肥胖增加得更多。不同性别、种族和SES的患病率及增加率差异显著,掩盖了问题的严重程度。在3年期间,向不健康BMI转变比获得更健康的BMI更为常见。这也表明肥胖一旦开始,就很难打破循环。需要根据本研究确定的趋势制定早期预防策略,特别关注生活在高SES地区的白人儿童以及处于经济转型期的黑人儿童。