Hu Kai, Cui Aoyuan, Zhang Xiao
Department of Sociology, School of Social and Public Administration, East China University of Science and Technology, Shanghai, China.
CAS Key Laboratory of Nutrition, Metabolism and Food Safety, Shanghai Institute of Nutrition and Health, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shanghai, China.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2023 Nov 20. doi: 10.1136/jech-2022-220024.
The intergenerational relationship between parental famine exposure and the obesity risks of offspring has not been well studied.
Using a cohort of 3654 respondents whose parents were born between 1950 and 1964 from the national data of the China Family Panel Studies, this study examines the associations between parental exposure to the 1959-1961 Chinese famine and offspring's body mass index (BMI). A cross-sectional difference-in-difference design was used to estimate the effects of parental famine exposures on offspring's BMI by exploiting temporal variations in the duration and period of famine across the parental birth cohorts between 1950 and 1964, and geographical variations in the famine severity at the province level.
After adjusting individual characteristics and province-level fixed effects, we found that parental famine exposures in the preschool and school-age stages were associated with an increased BMI of offspring while there was not a significant association between prenatal famine exposure and offspring's BMI. The stratified analyses further show that the effects of parental famine exposure did not follow the same trajectory in subgroups.
Famine experiences of parents were associated with increased BMI of offspring, suggesting an intergenerational impact of severe malnutrition on obesity risks.
父母经历饥荒与后代肥胖风险之间的代际关系尚未得到充分研究。
本研究利用中国家庭追踪调查的全国数据,对3654名父母出生于1950年至1964年的受访者进行队列研究,考察父母经历1959 - 1961年中国饥荒与后代体重指数(BMI)之间的关联。采用横断面差分设计,通过利用1950年至1964年父母出生队列中饥荒持续时间和时期的时间变化,以及省级层面饥荒严重程度的地理变化,来估计父母饥荒经历对后代BMI的影响。
在调整个体特征和省级固定效应后,我们发现父母在学龄前和学龄期经历饥荒与后代BMI升高有关,而产前饥荒暴露与后代BMI之间没有显著关联。分层分析进一步表明,父母饥荒暴露的影响在亚组中并不遵循相同的轨迹。
父母的饥荒经历与后代BMI升高有关,表明严重营养不良对肥胖风险存在代际影响。