Proctor M H, Moore L L, Singer M R, Hood M Y, Nguyen U S, Ellison R C
Evans Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine 02118, USA.
Ethn Dis. 1996 Autumn;6(3-4):235-43.
In developing countries, there is evidence that the median age of the population and the life expectancy at birth are increasing as a result of decreasing fertility rates and infant mortality. The result is an aging population more prone to non-communicable diseases such as diabetes, cancer, or heart disease later in life. In addition, changing lifestyle factors such as tobacco use, physical inactivity, and high fat diets, may accelerate the emergence of such chronic diseases as major causes of death and disability in these countries, particularly in urban areas. To test the premise that urban living predisposes residents to reduced activity levels, less healthy diets, cigarette smoking, elevated blood pressure, and increased body fat early in life, we studied rural/urban differences in these risk factors among schoolchildren in the Republic of Cameroon.
One hundred and nineteen Class 7 schoolchildren (50 urban and 69 rural) were interviewed concerning diet, physical activity, smoking, and alcohol use; blood pressure and anthropometric measurements were also taken.
Physical activity among rural children was more than twice that of urban children, and most of the activity for rural children was work-related. Rural children consumed fewer foods containing fat and more fruits and vegetables. Adjusting for age, systolic and diastolic blood pressures of urban boys were higher than those of rural boys, and among urban children there was a trend toward a larger age-adjusted mean body mass index (BMI). There were no differences in alcohol or tobacco use between urban and rural children.
In this study, urbanization was associated with a less active lifestyle and a dietary pattern that was higher in fat and lower in fruit and vegetable intake. Since risk factors for non-communicable diseases tend to appear early in life and track into adulthood, it is important to identify those children, or groups of children, with unfavorable risk profiles and to structure health education and promotion programs to modify these trends.
在发展中国家,有证据表明,由于生育率和婴儿死亡率下降,人口中位数年龄和出生时预期寿命正在增加。结果是人口老龄化,在晚年更容易患上糖尿病、癌症或心脏病等非传染性疾病。此外,吸烟、缺乏体育活动和高脂肪饮食等生活方式因素的改变,可能会加速这些慢性病的出现,成为这些国家,尤其是城市地区死亡和残疾的主要原因。为了验证城市生活使居民在生命早期活动水平降低、饮食不健康、吸烟、血压升高和体脂增加这一前提,我们研究了喀麦隆共和国学童中这些风险因素的城乡差异。
对119名七年级学童(50名城市学童和69名农村学童)进行了关于饮食、体育活动、吸烟和饮酒的访谈;还测量了血压和人体测量数据。
农村儿童的体育活动量是城市儿童的两倍多,而且农村儿童的大部分活动与工作有关。农村儿童食用的高脂肪食物较少,水果和蔬菜较多。调整年龄后,城市男孩的收缩压和舒张压高于农村男孩,并且在城市儿童中,年龄调整后的平均体重指数(BMI)有升高趋势。城乡儿童在饮酒或吸烟方面没有差异。
在本研究中,城市化与生活方式不活跃以及高脂肪、低水果和蔬菜摄入量的饮食模式有关。由于非传染性疾病的风险因素往往在生命早期出现并持续到成年,因此识别那些具有不利风险特征的儿童或儿童群体,并制定健康教育和促进计划以改变这些趋势非常重要。