Dawson D A
Division of Health Interview Statistics, National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, MD 20782.
Am J Public Health. 1988 Oct;78(10):1326-9. doi: 10.2105/ajph.78.10.1326.
Ethnic differences in female overweight were analyzed using data from the 1985 National Health Interview Survey. The sample consisted of approximately 17,000 women, ages 18 and over. After adjusting for age and poverty status, there were clear differences in the proportions of women 20 per cent or more overweight among Black, Hispanic and other White women (35, 26 and 20 per cent, respectively). Black women were less likely than White women to perceive themselves as overweight when categorized by actual weight relative to ideal weight; however, within categories of weight relative to other women of the same ethnic group, all women not Hispanic were equally likely to consider themselves overweight. There was no difference by ethnicity in the proportion of women trying to lose weight among those who perceived themselves as overweight. These findings have implications for programs designed to modify weight, since they suggest that women use ethnic-specific standards in assessing overweight.
利用1985年全国健康访谈调查的数据,对女性超重方面的种族差异进行了分析。样本包括约17000名18岁及以上的女性。在对年龄和贫困状况进行调整后,黑人、西班牙裔和其他白人女性中体重超重20%或更多的女性比例存在明显差异(分别为35%、26%和20%)。当按照相对于理想体重的实际体重进行分类时,黑人女性比白人女性更不容易认为自己超重;然而,在相对于同一种族其他女性的体重类别中,所有非西班牙裔女性认为自己超重的可能性是相同的。在那些认为自己超重的女性中,试图减肥的女性比例在种族上没有差异。这些发现对旨在改变体重的项目具有启示意义,因为它们表明女性在评估超重时使用特定种族的标准。