Acciai Francesco, Yellow Horse Aggie J, Ohri-Vachaspati Punam
College of Health Solutions, Arizona State University, Phoenix, AZ, USA.
School of Social Transformation, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA.
SSM Popul Health. 2020 Aug 22;12:100652. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100652. eCollection 2020 Dec.
Individual-, family-, and contextual-level factors can simultaneously and interactively affect a child's body mass index (BMI). We examine parental nativity as a key determinant of changes in children's BMI over time. Prior research on this topic has been inconclusive. A longitudinal sample of households with children residing in four low-income, high minority New Jersey cities provided data on demographics, socioeconomic status, anthropometric measures, as well as dietary and physical activity behaviors for one randomly selected child. The baseline interview for two separate cohorts took place in 2009/10 and 2014-15, with a follow-up interview 2-5 years later. The outcome variable, change in BMI z-score was divided into three categories (decrease in BMI z-score; no meaningful change; increase in BMI z-score) and analyzed using ordinal logistic regressions. About 28% of the children in the sample had at least one foreign-born parent. For the two major racial/ethnic groups, i.e., Hispanics and non-Hispanic blacks, having a foreign-born parent was associated with a change in BMI-children of foreign-born parents were more likely to experience a decrease BMI z-score between baseline and follow-up. Multivariate analyses reveal that the initial association between parental nativity and children's BMI change (OR = 0.20; p < 0.001) persists after controlling for an extensive set of covariates, such as child dietary and physical activity behaviors, family-level variables, census tract characteristics, and measures of food environment (OR = 0.17; p < 0.001). Through a series of sensitivity analyses, we verified that our results are consistent across different model specifications. In our sample, having a foreign-born parent was a protective factor for children's BMI change that operates through different pathways than might be anticipated.
个体、家庭和环境层面的因素可同时且相互作用地影响儿童的体重指数(BMI)。我们将父母的出生地作为儿童BMI随时间变化的关键决定因素进行研究。此前关于该主题的研究尚无定论。一项针对居住在新泽西州四个低收入、少数族裔比例高的城市且有孩子的家庭的纵向样本,提供了人口统计学、社会经济地位、人体测量指标以及一名随机挑选儿童的饮食和身体活动行为的数据。两个独立队列的基线访谈分别于2009/10年和2014 - 2015年进行,并在2至5年后进行随访访谈。结果变量,即BMI z评分的变化被分为三类(BMI z评分下降;无显著变化;BMI z评分上升),并使用有序逻辑回归进行分析。样本中约28%的儿童至少有一位外国出生的父母。对于两个主要种族/族裔群体,即西班牙裔和非西班牙裔黑人,有外国出生的父母与BMI的变化相关——外国出生父母的孩子在基线和随访之间更有可能经历BMI z评分下降。多变量分析显示,在控制了一系列广泛的协变量后,如儿童饮食和身体活动行为、家庭层面变量、普查区特征以及食物环境指标,父母出生地与儿童BMI变化之间的初始关联(OR = 0.20;p < 0.001)仍然存在(OR = 0.17;p < 0.001)。通过一系列敏感性分析,我们验证了我们的结果在不同模型设定下是一致的。在我们的样本中,有外国出生的父母是儿童BMI变化的一个保护因素,其作用途径与预期的不同。