College of Economics and Management, China Agricultural University, Beijing 100083, China.
Agricultural Trade Promotion Center, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs of P.R. China, Beijing 100025, China.
Nutrients. 2020 Apr 24;12(4):1197. doi: 10.3390/nu12041197.
Obesity is a rapidly growing public health threat in China. Improvement of dietary knowledge may potentially reduce the risk of obesity and being overweight. However, existing studies focus on measuring the mean effects of nutrition knowledge on body mass index (BMI). There is a lack of literature on the effect of dietary knowledge on BMI, and the potential heterogeneity of the effect across the whole BMI distribution and across socioeconomic status (SES) groups. This study aims to investigate the heterogeneous nature of the relationship between dietary knowledge, SES, and BMI, using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) in 2015. We employed unconditional quantile regression (UQR) to assess how the relationship between dietary knowledge, SES, and BMI varies across the whole BMI distribution, and conducted subgroup analyses using different socio-economic subsamples. Results indicate that dietary knowledge had no statistically significant impact on BMI across the BMI distribution. There was a large degree of heterogeneity in the SES effect across the BMI distribution as well as a major gender difference in the SES effect on BMI. Education had a significant and inverse association with BMI across the BMI distribution, greater at higher BMI quantiles. Income growth had a larger effect on the 50th quantile of BMI for males in the middle-income group, but was not significant for females. As income increased, males without college educations had higher BMI while females with college or higher education generally had lower BMI. The findings of this study reveal the heterogeneous nature of the relationship between SES, gender, and obesity across the entire BMI distribution, suggesting that quantile regressions might offer a valuable framework for exploring the complex relationship of dietary knowledge, demographic, and socio-economic factors on obesity.
肥胖是中国日益严重的公共卫生威胁。提高饮食知识可能潜在地降低肥胖和超重的风险。然而,现有的研究主要集中在衡量营养知识对身体质量指数(BMI)的平均影响上。关于饮食知识对 BMI 的影响,以及整个 BMI 分布和社会经济地位(SES)群体之间的潜在异质性,文献相对较少。本研究旨在利用 2015 年中国健康与营养调查(CHNS)的数据,探讨饮食知识、SES 和 BMI 之间关系的异质性。我们采用无条件分位数回归(UQR)来评估饮食知识、SES 和 BMI 之间的关系在整个 BMI 分布中的变化,并使用不同的社会经济子样本进行亚组分析。结果表明,饮食知识在整个 BMI 分布中对 BMI 没有统计学上的显著影响。SES 对 BMI 的影响在 BMI 分布上存在很大程度的异质性,SES 对 BMI 的影响在性别上也存在很大差异。教育在整个 BMI 分布上与 BMI 呈显著负相关,在较高 BMI 分位数上的相关性更大。收入增长对中等收入组男性 BMI 第 50 分位数的影响更大,但对女性没有显著影响。随着收入的增加,没有大学学历的男性 BMI 更高,而具有大学或更高学历的女性 BMI 通常更低。本研究的结果揭示了 SES、性别和肥胖之间在整个 BMI 分布上的关系的异质性,表明分位数回归可能为探索饮食知识、人口统计学和社会经济因素对肥胖的复杂关系提供有价值的框架。