Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior, Alpert Medical School of Brown University, The Miriam Hospital/Weight Control and Diabetes Research Center, Providence, Rhode Island.
Department of Biostatistics, Columbia University, New York, New York.
Am J Prev Med. 2018 Jan;54(1):e21-e29. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2017.09.005. Epub 2017 Nov 11.
The current study aims to characterize weight-change trajectories and their concomitant associations with prospectively measured dieting and other disordered eating behaviors among initially nonoverweight adolescents during the transition to adulthood.
A population-based sample (n=1,091) self-reported their height/weight, dieting, unhealthy weight-control behaviors, and binge eating at 5-year intervals between 1998/1999 and 2013/2014, spanning early/middle adolescence through middle/late young adulthood. Data were analyzed in 2016/2017.
Groups were categorized as those who were never overweight (n=562), were overweight during at least one measurement point and gained weight more rapidly (n=246) or gradually (n=238) than their peers, or were overweight during at least one measurement point but returned to nonoverweight status by middle/late young adulthood (n=45). Thus, nearly half of adolescents became overweight during the transition to adulthood. Those who were never overweight had the lowest rates of dieting (males: F[9, 1,314]=2.54, p=0.0069, females: F[9, 1,927]=3.02, p=0.0014) and unhealthy weight-control behaviors (males: F[9, 1,313]=3.30, p=0.0005, females: F[9, 1,927]=3.02, p=0.0014), whereas some of these behaviors tended to track with weight gain in rapid and gradual weight gainers.
Although adolescents who are already overweight are most frequently targeted for weight-gain prevention and early intervention programs, results suggest that healthy lifestyle interventions could also benefit individuals who may be perceived as low risk for overweight in adulthood by nature of being nonoverweight in adolescence. Dieting and unhealthy weight-control behaviors tended to be associated with weight gain, suggesting that they are ineffective in addition to being potentially harmful.
本研究旨在描述体重变化轨迹,并分析其与超重青少年在向成年过渡期间的节食和其他饮食失调行为之间的关联。
本研究采用基于人群的样本(n=1091),在 1998/1999 年至 2013/2014 年的 5 年时间间隔内,通过自我报告身高/体重、节食、不健康的体重控制行为和暴饮暴食,来追踪青少年早期/中期到中期/晚期青年期的情况。数据分析于 2016/2017 年进行。
研究将参与者分为以下几类:从未超重的人(n=562)、至少有一个测量点超重且体重增长较快(n=246)或较慢(n=238)的人、至少有一个测量点超重但在中年/晚期青年期体重恢复正常(n=45)的人。因此,近一半的青少年在向成年过渡期间体重超重。从未超重的青少年节食率最低(男性:F[9, 1,314]=2.54,p=0.0069,女性:F[9, 1,927]=3.02,p=0.0014),不健康的体重控制行为也最少(男性:F[9, 1,313]=3.30,p=0.0005,女性:F[9, 1,927]=3.02,p=0.0014),而其中一些行为与快速和缓慢增重者的体重增加有关。
尽管已经超重的青少年最常被视为体重增加预防和早期干预计划的目标人群,但结果表明,健康的生活方式干预也可能对那些在青春期就被认为成年后超重风险较低的个体有益。节食和不健康的体重控制行为往往与体重增加有关,这表明它们不仅无效,而且可能有害。