Broyles S T, Denstel K D, Church T S, Chaput J-P, Fogelholm M, Hu G, Kuriyan R, Kurpad A, Lambert E V, Maher C, Maia J, Matsudo V, Olds T, Onywera V, Sarmiento O L, Standage M, Tremblay M S, Tudor-Locke C, Zhao P, Katzmarzyk P T
Pennington Biomedical Research Center , Baton Rouge, LA, USA.
Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute , Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Int J Obes Suppl. 2015 Dec;5(Suppl 2):S3-8. doi: 10.1038/ijosup.2015.12. Epub 2015 Dec 8.
Childhood obesity is now recognized as a global public health issue. Social patterning of obesity, consistent with the theory of epidemiologic transition, has not been well described in children, and the limited research has focused on developed settings. The aim of this study was to describe the relationship between childhood obesity and household income using objective measures of adiposity and to explore how this relationship differs across levels of country human development.
The International Study of Childhood Obesity, Lifestyle and the Environment (ISCOLE) was a multi-national cross-sectional study conducted in 12 urban/suburban study sites that represented all inhabited continents and wide ranges of development. ISCOLE collected objectively measured height, body mass and percentage body fat in 7341 10-year-old children. Multi-level random-effects models were used to examine income gradients in several obesity measures.
The mean age of the children was 10.4 years, and 12.6% were obese, ranging from 5.4% (Finland) to 23.8% (China). For both boys and girls, obesity prevalence, body fat percentage and body mass index (BMI) z-score increased linearly with higher income at lower levels of development (all P for trend ⩽0.0012), but decreased linearly with higher income at higher levels of development (all P for trend ⩽0.0003). Country human development explained 75% of the variation in the country-specific income-obesity relationships (r=-0.87, P=0.0003).
Results are consistent with the theory of epidemiologic transition. Global efforts to control obesity must account for socioeconomic factors within a country's context. Future research should seek to understand global socioeconomic patterns in obesity-related lifestyle behaviors.
儿童肥胖现已被视为一个全球公共卫生问题。与流行病学转变理论一致的肥胖社会模式在儿童中尚未得到充分描述,且有限的研究集中在发达地区。本研究的目的是使用肥胖的客观测量指标来描述儿童肥胖与家庭收入之间的关系,并探讨这种关系在不同国家人类发展水平之间的差异。
儿童肥胖、生活方式与环境国际研究(ISCOLE)是一项在12个城市/郊区研究地点进行的多国横断面研究,这些地点代表了所有有人居住的大陆和广泛的发展水平。ISCOLE收集了7341名10岁儿童的客观测量身高、体重和体脂百分比。使用多水平随机效应模型来检验几种肥胖测量指标中的收入梯度。
儿童的平均年龄为10.4岁,12.6%的儿童肥胖,范围从5.4%(芬兰)到23.8%(中国)。对于男孩和女孩,在较低发展水平下,肥胖患病率、体脂百分比和体重指数(BMI)z评分随收入增加呈线性增加(所有趋势P值≤0.0012),但在较高发展水平下,随收入增加呈线性下降(所有趋势P值≤0.0003)。国家人类发展解释了特定国家收入与肥胖关系中75%的变异(r=-0.87,P=0.0003)。
结果与流行病学转变理论一致。全球控制肥胖的努力必须考虑一个国家背景下的社会经济因素。未来的研究应致力于了解肥胖相关生活方式行为的全球社会经济模式。