Department of Epidemiology and Prevention, Division of Public Health Sciences, Weight Management Center, Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC, 27157, USA.
Department of General Surgery, Weight Management Center, Wake Forest Baptist Medical Center, Winston-Salem, NC, 27157, USA.
Curr Obes Rep. 2016 Jun;5(2):282-90. doi: 10.1007/s13679-016-0211-1.
There are clear and persistent disparities in obesity prevalence within the USA. Some of these disparities fall along racial/ethnic lines; however, there are a number of other social and demographic constructs where obesity disparities are present. In addition to differing rates of obesity across groups, there is growing evidence that subgroups of patients both seek out and respond to obesity treatment differently. This review article explores the epidemiology of obesity disparities, as well as the existing evidence around how different groups may respond to behavioral, medical, and surgical therapies, and potential reasons for differential uptake and response, from culture, to access, to physiology. We find that the vast majority of evidence in this area has focused on the observation that African Americans tend to lose less weight in clinical trials compared to non-Hispanic whites and mainly pertains to behavioral interventions. Moving forward, there will be a need for studies that broaden the notion of health disparity beyond just comparing African Americans and non-Hispanic whites. Additionally, a more thorough examination of the potential for disparate outcomes after medical and surgical treatments of obesity is needed, coupled with the careful study of possible physiologic drivers of differential treatment response.
美国存在明显且持续的肥胖患病率差异。其中一些差异与种族/民族有关;然而,还有许多其他社会和人口结构的构建,存在肥胖差异。除了不同群体的肥胖率不同之外,越来越多的证据表明,患者的亚组在寻求和对肥胖治疗的反应上存在差异。这篇综述文章探讨了肥胖差异的流行病学,以及现有证据表明不同群体如何对行为、医学和手术治疗产生不同的反应,以及文化、获取途径、生理等方面导致不同接受度和反应的潜在原因。我们发现,这一领域的绝大多数证据都集中在观察到非裔美国人在临床试验中比非西班牙裔白人减肥效果更差,而且主要涉及行为干预。未来,需要进行研究,将健康差异的概念扩大到不仅仅是比较非裔美国人和非西班牙裔白人。此外,还需要更全面地研究肥胖的医学和手术治疗后可能出现的不同结果,并仔细研究可能导致治疗反应差异的生理驱动因素。