Zamora-Kapoor Anna, Nelson Lonnie, Buchwald Dedra
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, University of Washington, United States; Initiative for Research and Education to Advance Community Health (IREACH), Washington State University, United States.
Initiative for Research and Education to Advance Community Health (IREACH), Washington State University, United States.
Eat Behav. 2016 Jan;20:43-7. doi: 10.1016/j.eatbeh.2015.11.002. Epub 2015 Nov 14.
Obesity rates for American Indian and Alaska Native (AI/AN) adolescents are among the highest in the US. However, little is known about the influence of maternal correlates on adolescent body mass index (BMI), and the extent to which the size and significance of these correlates vary by adolescent sex and race.
We conducted a cross-sectional analysis with a sample of 531 AI/AN and 8896 White mother/adolescent pairs from Wave 1 of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. We used generalized estimating equations to measure the association of maternal educational attainment, marital status, employment status, obesity status, and adolescent BMI of AI/AN and White adolescents, while controlling for adolescents' demographic and behavioral covariates. We sought to determine whether the size and statistical significance of maternal correlates differed by race, and between mother/son and mother/daughter pairs.
The strength and statistical significance of maternal correlates varied between mother/son and mother/daughter pairs in both races. However, we did not find effect modification by race. Maternal obesity showed the strongest effect on adolescent BMI in all mother/adolescent pairs.
Our findings suggest that maternal factors are critical in the transmission of obesogenic behaviors from one generation to the next, and their effects vary between mother/son and mother/daughter pairs, and are similar for AI/ANs and Whites. We encourage future work aimed at preventing adolescent obesity to investigate causal pathways between maternal correlates and adolescent BMI.
美国印第安人和阿拉斯加原住民(AI/AN)青少年的肥胖率在美国名列前茅。然而,关于母亲相关因素对青少年体重指数(BMI)的影响,以及这些相关因素的规模和重要性在青少年性别和种族之间的差异程度,我们知之甚少。
我们对来自全国青少年健康纵向研究第一波的531对AI/AN和8896对白人母亲/青少年进行了横断面分析。我们使用广义估计方程来衡量AI/AN和白人青少年的母亲教育程度、婚姻状况、就业状况、肥胖状况与青少年BMI之间的关联,同时控制青少年的人口统计学和行为协变量。我们试图确定母亲相关因素的规模和统计显著性在种族之间,以及在母亲/儿子和母亲/女儿对之间是否存在差异。
在两个种族中,母亲相关因素的强度和统计显著性在母亲/儿子和母亲/女儿对之间有所不同。然而,我们没有发现种族的效应修正。在所有母亲/青少年对中,母亲肥胖对青少年BMI的影响最强。
我们的研究结果表明,母亲因素在致肥胖行为从一代向下一代的传递中至关重要,其影响在母亲/儿子和母亲/女儿对之间有所不同,并且对AI/AN和白人来说是相似的。我们鼓励未来旨在预防青少年肥胖的工作去研究母亲相关因素与青少年BMI之间的因果途径。