Rural Health Research Institute, Charles Sturt University, Orange, NSW, 2800, Australia.
Health and Development Society Nepal, Lalitpur, Nepal.
Sci Rep. 2024 Sep 29;14(1):22545. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-73522-5.
The rapid epidemiological transition in Asian countries, resulting from the rising trend of urbanisation and lifestyle changes, is associated with an increasing risk of obesity in women of reproductive age. This is the first study to investigate the trends and population-attributable fraction (PAF) of obesity, and the interaction effects of education and wealth on obesity among reproductive-age women aged 15-49 years in ten Asian countries. This cross-sectional study examined the most recent (2000 to 2022) Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) data from ten Central and Southeast Asian countries. Multilevel multinomial logistic regression models were used to compute odds ratios (ORs). PAFs adjusted for communality were calculated using adjusted ORs and prevalence estimates for each risk factor. This study included a weighted sample of 743,494 reproductive-age women. All the countries showed an increasing trend for obesity and a decreasing trend for underweight, except for the Maldives. The highest PAFs of obesity were associated with women who were married (PAF = 22.2%; 95% CI 22.1, 22.4), aged 35-49 years (PAF = 16.4%; 95% CI 15.5, 17.1), resided in wealthy households (PAF = 14.5%; 95% CI 14.4, 14.5), watched television regularly (PAF = 12.5%; 95% CI 12.1, 12.8), and lived in urban areas (PAF = 7.8%; 95% CI 7.7, 8.0). The combined PAF showed that these five risk factors were associated with 73.3% (95% CI 71.8, 74.9) of obesity among reproductive-age women. Interaction analysis between women's education and household wealth revealed that having a secondary or higher level of education and residing in a wealthier household was associated with a lower risk of obesity (OR = 0.71, 95% CI 0.66, 0.76). The findings of this study suggest that, in order to address the rising rate of obesity among women in Asian countries, education and lifestyle modifications in urban areas should be a priority. Pakistan and the Maldives need to be a priority given the rapidly increasing trends in obesity and underweight subpopulations in their respective countries.
亚洲国家快速的流行病学转变,源于城市化和生活方式改变的上升趋势,与生育年龄妇女肥胖风险的增加有关。这是第一项研究,旨在调查亚洲十个国家生育年龄为 15-49 岁的妇女中肥胖的趋势和人群归因分数(PAF),以及教育和财富对肥胖的交互作用。这项横断面研究调查了最近(2000 年至 2022 年)来自十个中亚和东南亚国家的人口与健康调查(DHS)数据。多水平多项逻辑回归模型用于计算比值比(OR)。使用调整后的 OR 和每个危险因素的患病率估计值,计算调整后的共同性的 PAF。这项研究包括一个经过加权的 743494 名生育年龄妇女的样本。所有国家的肥胖率呈上升趋势,消瘦率呈下降趋势,但马尔代夫除外。肥胖的最高 PAF 与已婚女性(PAF=22.2%;95%CI 22.1, 22.4)、35-49 岁女性(PAF=16.4%;95%CI 15.5, 17.1)、居住在富裕家庭(PAF=14.5%;95%CI 14.4, 14.5)、经常看电视(PAF=12.5%;95%CI 12.1, 12.8)和居住在城市(PAF=7.8%;95%CI 7.7, 8.0)有关。综合 PAF 表明,这五个危险因素与生育年龄妇女肥胖的 73.3%(95%CI 71.8, 74.9)有关。对妇女教育和家庭财富之间的交互作用进行分析表明,具有中等或高等教育程度和居住在富裕家庭与肥胖风险降低有关(OR=0.71,95%CI 0.66, 0.76)。这项研究的结果表明,为了应对亚洲国家妇女肥胖率的上升,教育和城市地区生活方式的改变应该是优先事项。鉴于巴基斯坦和马尔代夫各自国家肥胖和消瘦亚人群的快速增长趋势,这两个国家应是优先事项。