Population Health Laboratory (#PopHealthLab), University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland
Population Health Laboratory (#PopHealthLab), University of Fribourg, Fribourg, Switzerland.
BMJ Open. 2024 May 28;14(5):e078428. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-078428.
Adolescence is a sensitive period for cardiometabolic health. Yet, it remains unknown if adolescent health behaviours, such as alcohol use, smoking, diet and physical activity, have differential effects across socioeconomic strata. Adopting a life-course perspective and a causal inference framework, we aim to assess whether the effects of adolescent health behaviours on adult cardiometabolic health differ by levels of neighbourhood deprivation, parental education and occupational class. Gaining a better understanding of these social disparities in susceptibility to health behaviours can inform policy initiatives that aim to improve population health and reduce socioeconomic inequalities in cardiometabolic health.
We will conduct a secondary analysis of the Young Finns Study, which is a longitudinal population-based cohort study. We will use measures of health behaviours-smoking, alcohol use, fruit and vegetable consumption, and physical activity-as exposure and parental education, occupational class and neighbourhood deprivation as effect modifiers during adolescence (ages 12-18 years). Eight biomarkers of cardiometabolic health (outcomes)-waist circumference, body mass index, blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, apolipoprotein B, plasma glucose and insulin resistance-will be measured when participants were aged 33-40. A descriptive analysis will investigate the clustering of health behaviours. Informed by this, we will conduct a causal analysis to estimate effects of single or clustered adolescent health behaviours on cardiometabolic health conditional on socioeconomic background. This analysis will be based on a causal model implemented via a directed acyclic graph and inverse probability-weighted marginal structural models to estimate effect modification.
The Young Finns study was conducted according to the guidelines of the Declaration of Helsinki, and the protocol was approved by ethics committees of University of Helsinki, Kuopio, Oulu, Tampere and Turku. We will disseminate findings at international conferences and a manuscript in an open-access peer-reviewed journal.
青春期是心血管代谢健康的敏感时期。然而,目前尚不清楚青少年的健康行为(如饮酒、吸烟、饮食和体育活动)是否会对社会经济阶层产生不同的影响。本研究采用生命历程观和因果推理框架,旨在评估青少年健康行为对成年人心血管代谢健康的影响是否因邻里剥夺程度、父母教育程度和职业阶层的不同而有所差异。更好地了解这些对健康行为易感性的社会差异,可以为旨在改善人口健康和减少心血管代谢健康方面的社会经济不平等的政策倡议提供信息。
我们将对青年芬兰人研究(Young Finns Study)进行二次分析,这是一项基于人群的纵向队列研究。我们将使用健康行为(吸烟、饮酒、水果和蔬菜摄入以及体力活动)作为暴露因素,并在青少年时期(12-18 岁)使用父母教育程度、职业阶层和邻里剥夺程度作为效应修饰剂。当参与者年龄在 33-40 岁时,将测量八项心血管代谢健康生物标志物(结局):腰围、体重指数、血压、低密度脂蛋白胆固醇、载脂蛋白 B、血浆葡萄糖和胰岛素抵抗。描述性分析将调查健康行为的聚类情况。在此基础上,我们将进行因果分析,根据社会经济背景,估计单一或聚类青少年健康行为对心血管代谢健康的影响。该分析将基于通过有向无环图和逆概率加权边缘结构模型实施的因果模型,以估计效应修饰。
青年芬兰人研究是根据《赫尔辛基宣言》的指导原则进行的,该方案已获得赫尔辛基大学、库奥皮奥大学、奥卢大学、坦佩雷大学和图尔库大学伦理委员会的批准。我们将在国际会议上和同行评议的开放获取期刊上发表研究结果。