Childhood circumstances, social mobility and the obesity transition: Evidence from South Africa

IF 2.2 3区 医学 Q2 ECONOMICS
Kate Rich, Dieter von Fintel
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The distribution of obesity tends to shift from rich to poor individuals as countries develop, in a process of shifting sociodemographic patterns of obesity that has been called the ‘obesity transition’. This change tends to happen with economic development, but little is known about the specific mechanisms that drive the change. We propose that improvements in childhood circumstances with economic development may be one of the drivers of the obesity transition. We explore whether the social gradient in body weight differs by childhood socioeconomic status (SES), proxied by the respondent’s mother having Grade 12, using South Africa’s nationally representative panel National Income Dynamics Study. In support of our hypothesis, we find that the social gradient in body weight is less positive for adults who had a high childhood SES, and already appears to have reversed among high-SES women who also had a high childhood SES. Upward social mobility over an individual’s life course or across a single generation is associated with higher body weight compared to a stable high SES. But a high SES sustained in childhood and adulthood – or across more than one generation – may decrease adult obesity risk, and result in a reversal of the social gradient in body weight. Random effects within-between models show that the social gradient in body weight and its interaction with childhood SES are driven more by differences in income between individuals than by short-run changes in income within individuals, again suggesting that the obesity transition is driven by long-run changes rather than by very short-run changes. Our results are broadly robust to using several alternative measures of body weight, childhood SES and adult SES. Our results are consistent with the hypothesis that widespread improvements in childhood circumstances and nutrition with economic development may contribute to the shift to later stages of the obesity transition.

童年环境、社会流动性和肥胖转变:来自南非的证据
随着国家的发展,肥胖的分布倾向于从富人向穷人转移,这一过程改变了肥胖的社会人口模式,被称为“肥胖转型”。这种变化往往伴随着经济的发展而发生,但人们对推动这种变化的具体机制知之甚少。我们认为,随着经济发展,儿童环境的改善可能是肥胖转变的驱动因素之一。我们使用南非全国代表性面板国民收入动态研究,探讨体重的社会梯度是否因儿童社会经济地位(SES)而不同,以被调查对象的母亲为12年级。为了支持我们的假设,我们发现体重的社会梯度对于童年时期社会经济地位高的成年人来说不那么积极,并且在童年时期社会经济地位高的女性中似乎已经逆转了。与稳定的高社会地位相比,个体一生或一代人的向上社会流动性与较高的体重有关。但是,在童年和成年时期——或者跨越一代以上——保持较高的社会经济地位,可能会降低成年后肥胖的风险,并导致体重的社会梯度逆转。中间模型的随机效应表明,体重的社会梯度及其与童年社会经济地位的相互作用更多地是由个人之间的收入差异驱动的,而不是由个人内部收入的短期变化驱动的,这再次表明,肥胖的转变是由长期变化驱动的,而不是由非常短期的变化驱动的。我们的研究结果对于体重、儿童SES和成人SES的几种替代测量方法具有广泛的可靠性。我们的结果与假设一致,即随着经济发展,儿童环境和营养的普遍改善可能有助于向肥胖过渡的后期阶段转变。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Economics & Human Biology
Economics & Human Biology 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
4.50
自引率
12.00%
发文量
85
审稿时长
61 days
期刊介绍: Economics and Human Biology is devoted to the exploration of the effect of socio-economic processes on human beings as biological organisms. Research covered in this (quarterly) interdisciplinary journal is not bound by temporal or geographic limitations.
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