Boström G, Diderichsen F
Karolinska Institute, Department of Public Health Sciences, Sundbyberg, Sweden.
Int J Epidemiol. 1997 Aug;26(4):860-6. doi: 10.1093/ije/26.4.860.
The purpose of this study was to analyse misclassification of height, weight and body mass index (BMI), derived from mail questionnaires, and its dependency on socioeconomic factors.
A random sample of 4442 adults aged 18-84 years, living in Stockholm county, Sweden, were in 1984-1985 asked about their height and weight. A few months later 3208 of these adults participated in a health examination that included measures of height and weight. In this study we have used occupational class as the socioeconomic indicator. We have used sensitivity as a measure of misclassification of height, weight and BMI.
The difference in mean measured height between socioeconomic groups I and III was 2.7 cm for men and 2.0 cm for women. The mean difference in measured height between socioeconomic groups I and III was higher for men than for women in all age groups. The mean difference between self-reported and measured height was 0.6 cm for men and 0.79 cm for women. For weight, the corresponding difference was -0.74 kg for men and -1.64 kg for women. Women's BMI was more underestimated than men's (-0.85 for women, -0.40 for men). When using self-reported height and weight for calculating BMI, 81% of the men and 78% of the women were classified correctly, but only 61% of the obese men and 55% of the obese women were identified. The BMI was underestimated in all socioeconomic groups. Manual workers had a lower proportion of underweight, compared to professionals and intermediate non-manual workers, while the objective measure showed the inverse relationship. The prevalence of overweight and obesity in men was 42% higher in socioeconomic group III compared with group I with self-reported data compared with 28% when measured. Underestimation of BMI was highest among women, the obese, the elderly, and male non-manual workers and female manual workers.
Our study shows that socioeconomic differences in height, when using self-reported information, involve an underestimation. This means that the height differences between socioeconomic groups in Sweden may actually be higher than that reported by individuals in surveys. The socioeconomic differences in underweight tend to be underestimated for men, as well as obesity for women, when using self-reported information. The socioeconomic differences in overweight and obesity are shown to be overestimated for men.
本研究旨在分析通过邮寄问卷得出的身高、体重及体重指数(BMI)的错误分类情况及其对社会经济因素的依赖性。
1984 - 1985年,对居住在瑞典斯德哥尔摩郡的4442名年龄在18 - 84岁的成年人进行随机抽样,询问他们的身高和体重。几个月后,其中3208名成年人参加了包括身高和体重测量的健康检查。在本研究中,我们将职业阶层用作社会经济指标。我们使用敏感度作为身高、体重及BMI错误分类的衡量指标。
社会经济第一组和第三组男性的平均测量身高差异为2.7厘米,女性为2.0厘米。在所有年龄组中,社会经济第一组和第三组男性的测量身高平均差异高于女性。男性自我报告身高与测量身高的平均差异为0.6厘米,女性为0.79厘米。对于体重,相应的差异男性为 - 0.74千克,女性为 - 1.64千克。女性的BMI比男性被低估得更多(女性为 - 0.85,男性为 - 0.40)。当使用自我报告的身高和体重来计算BMI时,81%的男性和78%的女性被正确分类,但只有61%的肥胖男性和55%的肥胖女性被识别出来。所有社会经济组的BMI均被低估。与专业人员和中级非体力劳动者相比,体力劳动者体重过轻的比例较低,而客观测量结果显示的是相反的关系。根据自我报告的数据,社会经济第三组男性超重和肥胖的患病率比第一组高42%,而测量时为28%。BMI的低估在女性、肥胖者、老年人以及男性非体力劳动者和女性体力劳动者中最为严重。
我们的研究表明,使用自我报告信息时,身高的社会经济差异存在低估情况。这意味着瑞典社会经济组之间的身高差异实际上可能高于调查中个人报告的差异。使用自我报告信息时,男性体重过轻的社会经济差异以及女性肥胖的差异往往被低估。男性超重和肥胖的社会经济差异被高估。