Adil Omar, Kuk Jennifer L, Ardern Chris I
School of Kinesiology and Health Sciences, York University, 4700 Keele St, Toronto, Ontario M3J 1P3, Canada.
Obes Res Clin Pract. 2022 Mar-Apr;16(2):151-157. doi: 10.1016/j.orcp.2022.02.006. Epub 2022 Feb 26.
Concurrent with the recent rise in overweight and obesity, concerns with weight discrimination have arisen. Individuals who have experienced weight discrimination report a host of deteriorations related to physical and psychological health, which may co-exist with behaviours such as increased food consumption and decreases in physical activity that make weight management difficult. What remains less clear, however, is the extent to which metabolic health may be specifically affected, and how this may vary by setting and perceived intensity of the lifetime history of weight discrimination.
To address this, a secondary data analysis was performed on 1365 participants from year 25 of the Coronary Artery Disease in Young Adults (CARDIA) study who were living with overweight and obesity. Descriptive statistics and logistic regression analyses were performed on the presence of metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and abdominal obesity, as well as their experience of the weight discrimination.
Prevalence of the metabolic syndrome, diabetes, and abdominal obesity was higher among those reporting low and high stress weight discrimination compared to those with no history of weight discrimination. In the adjusted analyses, weight discrimination was associated with a 65% greater likelihood for having metabolic syndrome, 85% greater likelihood of diabetes, and between a 2.5- and 3.9-times greater likelihood of abdominal obesity for low and high stress experiences, respectively.
Exposure to weight discrimination may worsen metabolic health, as characterized by higher rates of metabolic syndrome and abdominal obesity. These associations may be greater with levels of stress experienced from weight discrimination. Further longitudinal work is necessary to understand the temporal sequence, time lag, and any possible critical periods for weight discrimination on metabolic health.
随着近期超重和肥胖现象的增加,人们对体重歧视的担忧也随之出现。经历过体重歧视的个体报告了一系列与身心健康相关的恶化情况,这些情况可能与增加食物摄入量和减少身体活动等行为同时存在,而这些行为会使体重管理变得困难。然而,尚不清楚的是代谢健康可能受到的具体影响程度,以及这种影响如何因环境和一生中体重歧视经历的感知强度而异。
为了解决这个问题,对来自青年成人冠心病(CARDIA)研究第25年的1365名超重和肥胖参与者进行了二次数据分析。对代谢综合征、糖尿病和腹部肥胖的存在情况以及他们的体重歧视经历进行了描述性统计和逻辑回归分析。
与没有体重歧视史的人相比,报告有低压力和高压力体重歧视的人代谢综合征、糖尿病和腹部肥胖的患病率更高。在调整分析中,体重歧视与患代谢综合征的可能性增加65%、患糖尿病的可能性增加85%以及低压力和高压力经历下腹部肥胖的可能性分别增加2.5至3.9倍有关。
经历体重歧视可能会恶化代谢健康,表现为代谢综合征和腹部肥胖的发生率更高。这些关联可能随着体重歧视所经历的压力水平而更大。需要进一步的纵向研究来了解体重歧视对代谢健康的时间顺序、时间滞后和任何可能的关键时期。