Department of Epidemiology & Population Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.
School of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Ann Behav Med. 2021 Jul 22;55(8):734-745. doi: 10.1093/abm/kaaa114.
Hispanic/Latino youth are disproportionately burdened by obesity and have a high prevalence of prediabetes and dyslipidemia. Differences in parent and child acculturation related to language use and preference (i.e., language acculturation) are associated with adverse cardiometabolic health behaviors, but no study has examined associations with cardiometabolic markers.
To determine whether discordance in parent-child language acculturation (parent-child acculturation gap) was associated with poor youth cardiometabolic health.
Hispanic/Latino 8-16-year-olds (n = 1,466) and parents from the Hispanic Community Children's Health Study/Study of Latino Youth (SOL Youth) were examined. Mean scores for the Brief ARSMA-II's Anglo (AOS) and Latino (LOS) Orientation Scales represented language acculturation. Cardiometabolic markers included youth body mass index (BMI) percentile, blood pressure percentiles, and dysglycemia and hyperlipidemia measures. Missing data were imputed. Survey-weighted multivariable linear regression examined the association of youth, parent, and youth × parent (the acculturation gap) AOS and LOS scores separately with each cardiometabolic marker.
Youth reported greater English and lower Spanish use than parents. Greater discordance in AOS scores was associated with elevated BMI percentile only (p-for-interaction < .01). The LOS acculturation gap was not associated with any outcome. Adjustment for acculturative stress, family functioning and closeness, parenting style, and youth's diet and physical activity did not alter findings. Removal of nonsignificant acculturation gaps did not indicate an association between individual youth or parent AOS or LOS scores and any cardiometabolic marker.
Discordance in Hispanic/Latino parent-child dyads' English use may relate to increased risk for childhood obesity. Future studies should identify mediators of this association.
西班牙裔/拉丁裔青年肥胖问题尤为严重,且普遍存在糖尿病前期和血脂异常。父母与子女在语言使用和偏好方面的文化差异(即语言文化适应)与不良的心脏代谢健康行为有关,但尚无研究探讨其与心脏代谢标志物的关系。
确定父母-子女语言文化适应不一致(父母-子女文化适应差距)是否与青少年心脏代谢健康不良有关。
对参加西班牙裔社区儿童健康研究/拉丁裔青年研究(SOL 青年)的 1466 名 8-16 岁的西班牙裔/拉丁裔青少年及其父母进行了检查。简短的 ARSMA-II 的盎格鲁(AOS)和拉丁(LOS)取向量表的平均分数代表语言文化适应程度。心脏代谢标志物包括青少年体重指数(BMI)百分位数、血压百分位数以及血糖和血脂异常指标。采用调查加权多变量线性回归,分别检查青少年、父母以及青少年×父母(文化适应差距)AOS 和 LOS 评分与每个心脏代谢标志物的关联。
青少年报告的英语使用频率高于父母,西班牙语使用频率低于父母。AOS 评分差异较大与 BMI 百分位升高有关(交互作用 p 值<.01)。LOS 文化适应差距与任何结果均无关。调整文化适应压力、家庭功能和亲密程度、养育方式以及青少年的饮食和体育活动后,结果并未改变。消除不显著的文化适应差距并不能表明青少年或父母的 AOS 或 LOS 评分与任何心脏代谢标志物之间存在关联。
西班牙裔/拉丁裔亲子二人组英语使用的不一致可能与儿童肥胖风险增加有关。未来的研究应确定该关联的中介因素。