Division of Environmental Health Sciences, College of Public Health, The Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, USA.
Department of Economics, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Ethn Health. 2020 Jul;25(5):665-678. doi: 10.1080/13557858.2018.1442559. Epub 2018 Feb 22.
There are substantial racial and regional disparities in obesity prevalence in the United States. This study partitioned the mean Body Mass Index (BMI) and obesity prevalence rate gaps between non-Hispanic blacks and non-Hispanic whites into the portion attributable to observable obesity risk factors and the remaining portion attributable to unobservable factors at the national and the state levels in the United States (U.S.) in 2010. This study used a simulated micro-population dataset combining common information from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System and the U.S. Census data to obtain a reliable, large sample representing the adult populations at the national and state levels. It then applied a reweighting decomposition method to decompose the black-white mean BMI and obesity prevalence disparities at the national and state levels into the portion attributable to the differences in distribution of observable obesity risk factors and the remaining portion unexplainable with risk factors. We found that the observable differences in distribution of known obesity risk factors explain 18.5% of the mean BMI difference and 20.6% of obesity prevalence disparities between non-Hispanic blacks and non-Hispanic whites. There were substantial variations in how much the differences in distribution of known obesity risk factors can explain black-white gaps in mean BMI (-67.7% to 833.6%) and obesity prevalence (-278.5% to 340.3%) at the state level. The results from this study demonstrate that known obesity risk factors explain a small proportion of the racial, ethnic and between-state disparities in obesity prevalence in the United States. Future etiologic studies are required to further understand the causal factors underlying obesity and racial, ethnic and geographic disparities.
美国的肥胖流行率存在显著的种族和地区差异。本研究将非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人之间的平均体重指数(BMI)和肥胖流行率差距的部分归因于可观察到的肥胖风险因素,以及部分归因于美国 2010 年国家和州层面上不可观察的因素。本研究使用了一个模拟微观人群数据集,结合来自行为风险因素监测系统和美国人口普查数据的常见信息,以获得可靠的、代表国家和州层面成年人群的大样本。然后,应用重新加权分解方法将国家和州层面上黑人和白人之间的平均 BMI 和肥胖流行率差距分解为归因于可观察到的肥胖风险因素分布差异的部分和无法用风险因素解释的剩余部分。我们发现,可观察到的已知肥胖风险因素分布差异解释了非西班牙裔黑人和非西班牙裔白人之间平均 BMI 差异的 18.5%和肥胖流行率差异的 20.6%。在分布差异如何解释已知肥胖风险因素对黑人和白人之间平均 BMI (-67.7%至 833.6%)和肥胖流行率(-278.5%至 340.3%)差距的影响方面,各州之间存在很大差异。本研究结果表明,已知肥胖风险因素仅能解释美国肥胖流行率的种族、民族和州际差异的一小部分。需要进一步进行病因学研究,以进一步了解肥胖以及种族、民族和地理差异的因果因素。