Oddo Vanessa M, Nicholas Lauren Hersch, Bleich Sara N, Jones-Smith Jessica C
Department of International Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Department of Health Policy and Management, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Maryland, USA Department of Surgery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA Survey Research Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan, USA.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2016 Sep;70(9):874-80. doi: 10.1136/jech-2015-207117. Epub 2016 Jun 1.
The recent economic recession represents an opportunity to test whether decreases in economic resources may have deleterious consequences on childhood overweight/obesity risk.
We investigated the association between indicators of changing macroeconomic conditions from 2008 to 2012 and overweight/obesity risk among school-aged children in California (n=1 741 712) using longitudinal anthropometric measurements. Multivariate regression, with individual and county fixed effects, was used to examine the effects of annual county-level unemployment and foreclosure rates on risk of child overweight/obesity, overall and among subgroups (race/ethnicity, sex, county-level median household income and county-level urban/rural status).
From 2008 to 2012, ∼38% of children were overweight/obese and unemployment and foreclosure rates averaged 11% and 6.9%, respectively. A 1-percentage point (pp) increase in unemployment was associated with a 1.4 pp (95% CI 1.3 to 1.5) increase in overweight/obesity risk. Therefore, a child of average weight could expect a 14% increase in their body mass index z-score in association with a 1 pp increase in unemployment during the study period. We found some differences in the magnitude of the effects for unemployment among demographic subgroups, with the largest effects observed for unemployment among American Indians and Pacific Islanders.
Comparing children to themselves over time, we provide evidence that increases in county-level unemployment are associated with increased overweight/obesity risk. Given that overweight among children with lower economic resources remains a challenge for public health, these findings highlight the importance of policy-level approaches, which aim to mitigate the impact of decreased resources as economic conditions change.
近期的经济衰退为检验经济资源减少是否会对儿童超重/肥胖风险产生有害影响提供了契机。
我们利用纵向人体测量数据,调查了2008年至2012年宏观经济状况变化指标与加利福尼亚州学龄儿童(n = 1,741,712)超重/肥胖风险之间的关联。采用具有个体和县级固定效应的多变量回归分析,研究县级年度失业率和止赎率对儿童超重/肥胖风险的影响,包括总体影响以及亚组(种族/族裔、性别、县级家庭收入中位数和县级城乡状况)的影响。
2008年至2012年期间,约38%的儿童超重/肥胖,失业率和止赎率平均分别为11%和6.9%。失业率每上升1个百分点(pp),超重/肥胖风险就会增加1.4个百分点(95%可信区间为1.3至1.5)。因此,在研究期间,体重正常的儿童若失业率上升1个百分点,其体重指数z评分预计会增加14%。我们发现不同人口亚组中失业率影响的程度存在差异,美洲印第安人和太平洋岛民的失业率影响最大。
通过对儿童自身不同时间的比较,我们提供了证据表明县级失业率上升与超重/肥胖风险增加有关。鉴于经济资源较少的儿童超重问题仍然是公共卫生面临的一项挑战,这些发现凸显了政策层面措施的重要性,这些措施旨在减轻经济状况变化时资源减少带来的影响。