Kwarteng Jamila L, Schulz Amy J, Mentz Graciela B, Israel Barbara A, Shanks Trina R, Perkins Denise White
*Medical College of Wisconsin,Milwaukee,WI,USA.
†School of Public Health,University of Michigan,Ann Arbor,MI,USA.
J Biosoc Sci. 2016 Nov;48(6):709-22. doi: 10.1017/S0021932016000225. Epub 2016 May 30.
This study examines the independent effects of neighbourhood context (i.e. neighbourhood poverty) and exposure to perceived discrimination in shaping risk of obesity over time. Weighted three-level hierarchical linear regression models for a continuous outcome were used to assess the independent effects of neighbourhood poverty and perceived discrimination on obesity over time in a sample of 157 non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic White and Hispanic adults in Detroit, USA, in 2002/2003 and 2007/2008. Independent associations were found between neighbourhood poverty and perceived discrimination with central adiposity over time. Residents of neighbourhoods with high concentrations of poverty were more likely to show increases in central adiposity compared with those in neighbourhoods with lower concentrations of poverty. In models adjusted for BMI, neighbourhood poverty at baseline was associated with a greater change in central adiposity among participants who lived in neighbourhoods in the second (B=3.79, p=0.025) and third (B=3.73, p=0.024) poverty quartiles, compared with those in the lowest poverty neighbourhoods. The results from models that included both neighbourhood poverty and perceived discrimination showed that both were associated with increased risk of increased central adiposity over time. Residents of neighbourhoods in the second (B=9.58, p<0.001), third (B=8.25, p=0.004) and fourth (B=7.66, p=0.030) quartiles of poverty were more likely to show greater increases in central adiposity over time, compared with those in the lowest poverty quartile, with mean discrimination at baseline independently and positively associated with increases in central adiposity over time (B=2.36, p=0.020). The results suggest that neighbourhood poverty and perceived discrimination are independently associated with a heightened risk of increase in central adiposity over time. Efforts to address persistent disparities in central adiposity in the USA should include strategies to reduce high concentrations of neighbourhood poverty as well as discrimination.
本研究考察了邻里环境(即邻里贫困)和感知到的歧视对肥胖风险随时间变化的独立影响。使用加权三级分层线性回归模型来评估邻里贫困和感知到的歧视对美国底特律157名非西班牙裔黑人、非西班牙裔白人和西班牙裔成年人在2002/2003年和2007/2008年肥胖风险随时间变化的独立影响。研究发现邻里贫困和感知到的歧视与随时间变化的中心性肥胖之间存在独立关联。与贫困程度较低的邻里居民相比,贫困程度高的邻里居民更有可能出现中心性肥胖增加。在调整了体重指数的模型中,与最贫困邻里的参与者相比,基线时处于第二(B = 3.79,p = 0.025)和第三(B = 3.73,p = 0.024)贫困四分位数邻里的参与者,其中心性肥胖的变化更大。同时纳入邻里贫困和感知到的歧视的模型结果表明,两者都与随时间变化的中心性肥胖增加风险相关。与最低贫困四分位数的邻里居民相比,处于第二(B = 9.58,p < 0.001)、第三(B = 8.25,p = 0.004)和第四(B = 7.66,p = 0.030)贫困四分位数邻里的居民随时间变化更有可能出现更大的中心性肥胖增加,基线时的平均歧视与随时间变化的中心性肥胖增加独立且呈正相关(B = 2.36,p = 0.020)。结果表明,邻里贫困和感知到的歧视与随时间变化的中心性肥胖增加风险独立相关。在美国,解决中心性肥胖持续存在的差异的努力应包括减少邻里高贫困集中度以及歧视的策略。