Zafra-Tanaka Jessica Hanae, Braverman Ariela, Anza-Ramirez Cecilia, Ortigoza Ana, Lazo Mariana, Doberti Tamara, Rodriguez-Osiac Lorena, Lovasi Gina S, Mazariegos Mónica, Sarmiento Olga, Pérez Ferrer Carolina, Miranda J Jaime
CRONICAS Center of Excellence in Chronic Diseases, Universidad Peruana Cayetano Heredia, Lima, Peru.
Division of Tropical and Humanitarian Medicine, University of Geneva and Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Lancet Reg Health Am. 2023 Mar 10;20:100458. doi: 10.1016/j.lana.2023.100458. eCollection 2023 Apr.
Childhood obesity is a rising global health problem. The rapid urbanization experienced in Latin America might impact childhood obesity through different pathways involving urban built and social features of cities. We aimed to evaluate the association between built and social environment features of cities and childhood obesity across countries and cities in Latin America.
Cross-sectional analysis of data from 20,040 children aged 1-5 years living in 159 large cities in six Latin American countries. We used individual-level anthropometric data for excess weight (overweight or obesity) from health surveys that could be linked to city-level data. City and sub-city level exposures included the social environment (living conditions, service provision and educational attainment) and the built environment (fragmentation, isolation, presence of mass transit, population density, intersection density and percent greenness). Multi-level logistic models were used to explore associations between city features and excess weight, adjusting for age, sex, and head of household education.
The overall prevalence of excess weight among preschool children was 8% but varied substantially between and within countries, ranging from 4% to 25%. Our analysis showed that 97% of the variability was between individuals within sub-city units and around 3% of the variance in z-scores of weight for height was explained by the city and sub-city levels. At the city-level, a higher distance between urban patches (isolation, per 1 SD increase) was associated with lower odds of excess weight (OR 0.90, 95% CI 0.82-0.99). Higher sub-city education was also associated with lower odds of excess weight, but better sub-city living conditions were associated with higher odds of excess weight.
Built and social environment features are related to excess weight in preschool children. Our evidence from a wide range of large Latin American cities suggests that urban health interventions may be suitable alternatives towards attaining the goal of reducing excess weight early in the life course.
The SALURBAL project (Salud Urbana en América Latina, Urban Health in Latin America) is funded by Wellcome [205177/Z/16/Z].
儿童肥胖是一个日益严重的全球健康问题。拉丁美洲经历的快速城市化可能通过涉及城市建设和社会特征的不同途径影响儿童肥胖。我们旨在评估拉丁美洲各国和各城市的城市建设和社会环境特征与儿童肥胖之间的关联。
对来自拉丁美洲六个国家159个大城市的20,040名1至5岁儿童的数据进行横断面分析。我们使用了健康调查中与城市层面数据相关联的个体层面超重(超重或肥胖)人体测量数据。城市和次城市层面的暴露因素包括社会环境(生活条件、服务提供和教育程度)和建设环境(碎片化、隔离、公共交通的存在、人口密度、交叉路口密度和绿化百分比)。使用多层次逻辑模型来探索城市特征与超重之间的关联,并对年龄、性别和户主教育程度进行了调整。
学龄前儿童超重的总体患病率为8%,但在不同国家和国家内部差异很大,范围从4%到25%。我们的分析表明,97%的变异性存在于次城市单元内的个体之间,身高体重z分数中约3%的方差可由城市和次城市层面解释。在城市层面,城市斑块之间的距离越大(隔离,每标准差增加),超重的几率越低(OR 0.90,95%CI 0.82-0.99)。次城市教育程度越高,超重几率也越低,但次城市生活条件越好,超重几率越高。
建设和社会环境特征与学龄前儿童超重有关。我们从拉丁美洲众多大城市获得的证据表明,城市健康干预措施可能是在生命早期实现减轻超重目标的合适选择。
SALURBAL项目(拉丁美洲城市健康)由惠康基金会[编号205177/Z/16/Z]资助。