Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Department of International Health, Center for Human Nutrition, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America.
Drexel University Dornsife School of Public Health, Department of Biostatistics, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS Med. 2021 May 24;18(5):e1003596. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1003596. eCollection 2021 May.
Obesity prevalence remains high among children of Pacific Islander (PI) origin, Filipino (FI), and American Indian/Alaska Native (AIAN) origins in the United States. While school nutrition policies may help prevent and reduce childhood obesity, their influences specifically among PI, FI, and AIAN children remain understudied. We evaluated the association of the California (CA) state school nutrition policies for competitive food and beverages and the federal policy for school meals (Healthy, Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 (HHFKA 2010)) with overweight/obesity among PI, FI, and AIAN students.
We used an interrupted time series (ITS) design with FitnessGram data from 2002 to 2016 for PI (78,841), FI (328,667), AIAN (97,129), and White (3,309,982) students in fifth and seventh grades who attended CA public schools. Multilevel logistic regression models estimated the associations of the CA school nutrition policies (in effect beginning in academic year 2004 to 2005) and HHFKA 2010 (from academic year 2012 to 2013) with overweight/obesity prevalence (above the 85 percentile of the age- and sex-specific body mass index (BMI) distribution). The models were constructed separately for each grade and sex combination and adjusted for school district-, school-, and student-level characteristics such as percentage of students eligible for free and reduced price meals, neighborhood income and education levels, and age. Across the study period, the crude prevalence of overweight/obesity was higher among PI (39.5% to 52.5%), FI (32.9% to 36.7%), and AIAN (37.7% to 45.6%) children, compared to White (26.8% to 30.2%) students. The results generally showed favorable association of the CA nutrition policies with overweight/obesity prevalence trends, although the magnitudes of associations and strengths of evidence varied among racial/ethnic subgroups. Before the CA policies went into effect (2002 to 2004), overweight/obesity prevalence increased for White, PI, and AIAN students in both grades and sex groups as well as FI girls in seventh grade. After the CA policies took place (2005 to 2012), the overweight/obesity rates decreased for almost all subgroups who experienced increasing trends before the policies, with the largest decrease seen among PI girls in fifth grade (before: log odds ratio = 0.149 (95% CI 0.108 to 0.189; p < 0.001); after: 0.010 (-0.005 to 0.025; 0.178)). When both the CA nutrition policies and HHFKA 2010 were in effect (2013 to 2016), declines in the overweight/obesity prevalence were seen among White girls and FI boys in fifth grade. Despite the evidence of the favorable association of the school nutrition policies with overweight/obesity prevalence trends, disparities between PI and AIAN students and their White peers remained large after the policies took place. As these policies went into effect for all public schools in CA, without a clear comparison group, we cannot conclude that the changes in prevalence trends were solely attributable to these policies.
The current study found evidence of favorable associations of the state and federal school nutrition policies with overweight/obesity prevalence trends. However, the prevalence of overweight/obesity continued to be high among PI and AIAN students and FI boys. There remain wide racial/ethnic disparities between these racial/ethnic minority subgroups and their White peers. Additional strategies are needed to reduce childhood obesity and related disparities among these understudied racial/ethnic populations.
在美国,太平洋岛民(PI)、菲律宾裔(FI)和美洲印第安人/阿拉斯加原住民(AIAN)儿童的肥胖率仍然很高。虽然学校营养政策可能有助于预防和减少儿童肥胖,但它们对 PI、FI 和 AIAN 儿童的影响仍有待研究。我们评估了加利福尼亚州(CA)州学校营养政策对竞争性食品和饮料的影响,以及联邦学校膳食政策(2010 年《健康、无饥饿儿童法案》(HHFKA 2010))与 PI、FI 和 AIAN 学生超重/肥胖的关联。
我们使用了 FitGram 数据的中断时间序列(ITS)设计,该数据来自 2002 年至 2016 年,涵盖了在 CA 公立学校就读五年级和七年级的 78841 名 PI、328667 名 FI、97129 名 AIAN 和 3309982 名白人学生。多水平逻辑回归模型估计了 CA 学校营养政策(从 2004 至 2005 学年开始生效)和 HHFKA 2010 年(从 2012 至 2013 学年开始生效)与超重/肥胖患病率(高于年龄和性别特定 BMI 分布的第 85 百分位)之间的关联。为每个年级和性别组合构建了模型,并调整了学区、学校和学生层面的特征,如享受免费和降价餐的学生比例、邻里收入和教育水平以及年龄。在整个研究期间,PI(39.5%至 52.5%)、FI(32.9%至 36.7%)和 AIAN(37.7%至 45.6%)儿童的超重/肥胖患病率均高于白人(26.8%至 30.2%)学生。结果普遍表明,CA 营养政策与超重/肥胖患病率趋势呈有利关联,尽管关联的幅度和证据的强度在不同种族/族裔亚组之间有所不同。在 CA 政策生效之前(2002 年至 2004 年),白人、PI 和 AIAN 学生以及七年级的 FI 女孩的超重/肥胖患病率都有所增加。在 CA 政策实施后(2005 年至 2012 年),几乎所有在政策实施前出现上升趋势的亚组的超重/肥胖率都有所下降,其中 PI 女孩五年级的降幅最大(之前:对数优势比=0.149(95%CI 0.108 至 0.189;p<0.001);之后:0.010(-0.005 至 0.025;0.178))。当 CA 营养政策和 HHFKA 2010 同时生效(2013 年至 2016 年)时,五年级的白人女孩和 FI 男孩的超重/肥胖患病率下降。尽管有证据表明学校营养政策与超重/肥胖患病率趋势呈有利关联,但在政策实施后,PI 和 AIAN 学生与他们的白人同龄人之间的差距仍然很大。由于这些政策对 CA 的所有公立学校生效,没有明确的对照组,我们不能得出患病率趋势变化完全归因于这些政策的结论。
本研究发现了州和联邦学校营养政策与超重/肥胖患病率趋势呈有利关联的证据。然而,PI 和 AIAN 学生以及 FI 男孩的超重/肥胖率仍然很高。这些少数族裔亚组与他们的白人同龄人之间仍然存在广泛的种族/族裔差异。需要采取额外的策略来减少这些研究不足的种族/族裔群体的儿童肥胖和相关差异。