Rodd Celia, Sharma Atul K
Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Department of Pediatrics and Child Health, Children's Hospital Research Institute of Manitoba, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Manitoba.
Paediatr Child Health. 2017 Jun;22(3):153-158. doi: 10.1093/pch/pxx057. Epub 2017 May 5.
We recently reported an encouraging decline in the prevalence of overweight (OW) or obesity (OB) in Canadian children from 31% to 27% with stabilization in OB rates at ~13% using national survey data between 2004 and 2013. Although rates were lower for toddlers, girls and those of European (White) race-ethnicity, secular trends persisted after adjustment. In this follow-up study, we explored the ability of socioeconomic status to explain or modify these relationships using the same data set.
We analyzed a decade of anthropometric data from 14,014 children aged 3 to 19 years. We explored the influence of income adequacy, education, immigration status, family type (e.g., single-parent) and geographic region by multivariable logistic regression. Data sets included Canadian Community Health Survey cycle 2.2 and Canadian Health Measures Surveys cycles 2 and 3.
Children from higher-income families fared better than their lower-income counterparts in each survey era and demonstrated a significant decline in OW/OB from 29.1% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 27.3 to 30.8) in 2004 to 2005 to 22.2% (95% CI: 19.8 to 24.6) in 2012 to 2013, P<0.001. Regression models confirmed the effects of time, age, sex, race, income, education, immigration and region. Although single-parent families did less well in univariate analyses, this effect vanished after adjustment for other socioeconomic status variables, such as income and education. Regional variations persisted, with lower rates of OB and OW/OB in British Columbia and higher rates in Atlantic Canada.
These results confirm that progress is possible against this important public health challenge, underline the need to better understand sociodemographic risk factors and identify groups at higher risk for possible interventions.
我们最近利用2004年至2013年的全国调查数据报告称,加拿大儿童超重(OW)或肥胖(OB)的患病率令人鼓舞地从31%降至27%,肥胖率稳定在13%左右。尽管幼儿、女孩以及欧洲(白人)种族的患病率较低,但调整后长期趋势依然存在。在这项随访研究中,我们使用同一数据集探讨了社会经济地位解释或改变这些关系的能力。
我们分析了14014名3至19岁儿童的十年人体测量数据。我们通过多变量逻辑回归探讨了收入充足程度、教育程度、移民身份、家庭类型(如单亲家庭)和地理区域的影响。数据集包括加拿大社区健康调查第2.2轮以及加拿大健康措施调查第2轮和第3轮。
在每个调查时期,来自高收入家庭的儿童比低收入家庭的儿童情况更好,超重/肥胖率从2004年至2005年的29.1%(95%置信区间[CI]:27.3至30.8)显著下降至2012年至2013年的22.2%(95%CI:19.8至24.6),P<0.001。回归模型证实了时间、年龄、性别、种族、收入、教育程度、移民和地区的影响。尽管单亲家庭在单变量分析中表现较差,但在对收入和教育等其他社会经济地位变量进行调整后,这种影响消失了。地区差异依然存在,不列颠哥伦比亚省的肥胖和超重/肥胖率较低,加拿大大西洋地区的肥胖率较高。
这些结果证实,应对这一重要的公共卫生挑战取得进展是可能的,强调了更好地了解社会人口风险因素以及识别可能需要干预的高风险群体的必要性。