Department of Public Health, California State University, Los Angeles, California, USA.
Department of Medicine, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama, USA.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2019 Feb;73(2):148-155. doi: 10.1136/jech-2018-210838. Epub 2018 Nov 5.
Emerging studies have investigated the contribution of food environment to obesity in the USA. However, the findings were inconsistent. Methodological explanations for the inconsistent findings included: (1) using individual store/restaurant exposure as food environment indicator, and (2) not accounting for non-stationarity assumption. This study aimed to describe the spatial distribution of obesity and examine the association between community food environment and obesity, and the variation of magnitude and direction of this association across the USA.
Data from 20 897 adults who participated in the REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke study and completed baseline assessment between January 2003 and October 2007 were eligible in analysis. Hot Spot analysis was used to assess the spatial distribution of obesity. The association between community food environment and obesity and the variation of this association across the USA were examined using global ordinary least squares regression and local geographically weighted regression.
Higher body mass index (BMI) clusters were more likely to locate in socioeconomically disadvantaged, rural, minority neighbourhoods with a smaller population size, while lower BMI clusters were more likely to appear in more affluent, urban neighbourhoods with a higher percentage of non-Hispanic white residences. There was an overall significant, inverse association between community food environment and obesity (β=-0.0210; p<0.0001). Moreover, the magnitude and direction of this association varied significantly across the US regions.
The findings underscored the need for geographically tailored public health interventions and policies to address unique local food environment issues to achieve maximum effects on obesity prevention.
已有研究调查了美国食物环境对肥胖的影响,但结果并不一致。不一致的原因可能包括:(1)以单个商店/餐馆作为食物环境指标;(2)未考虑非平稳性假设。本研究旨在描述肥胖的空间分布,并探讨社区食物环境与肥胖的关系,以及这种关系在美国各地的变化幅度和方向。
符合分析标准的是参加 REasons for Geographic and Racial Differences in Stroke 研究并在 2003 年 1 月至 2007 年 10 月期间完成基线评估的 20897 名成年人的数据。热点分析用于评估肥胖的空间分布。使用全局普通最小二乘回归和局部地理加权回归检验社区食物环境与肥胖的关系以及这种关系在美国各地的变化。
更高的体重指数(BMI)聚类更有可能位于社会经济处于劣势的农村少数民族社区,人口规模较小,而较低的 BMI 聚类更有可能出现在更富裕的城市社区,那里的非西班牙裔白人居民比例更高。社区食物环境与肥胖之间存在显著的负相关关系(β=-0.0210;p<0.0001)。此外,这种关系的幅度和方向在美国各地区存在显著差异。
这些发现强调了需要针对特定地区的公共卫生干预和政策,以解决当地独特的食物环境问题,从而最大限度地预防肥胖。