"Competitive" Food and Beverage Laws and Obesity Among Diverse Youth in California High Schools.

IF 5.5 2区 医学 Q1 PEDIATRICS
Emma V Sanchez-Vaznaugh, Mika Matsuzaki, Kelsey Alexovitz, Maria Elena Acosta, Brisa N Sánchez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: To investigate associations between the California "competitive" food and beverage (CF&B) laws and overweight/obesity (OV/OB) among high school youth by gender, school-neighborhood income, and race/ethnicity, and to examine racial/ethnic OV/OB disparities before and after CF&B policies.

Methods: Using an interrupted time series design paired with retrospective cross-sectional Fitnessgram data from 3,565,260 youth-level records on ninth-grade students in California public schools, we estimated gender, school-neighborhood income, and racial/ethnic OV/OB prevalence trends before (2002-2007) and after the CF&B policies were in effect (2008-2012).

Results: In the period before the CF&B policies, OV/OB prevalence increased annually among the majority of subgroups regardless of gender, school-neighborhood income and race/ethnicity. In the period after the policies took place, OV/OB increased at a slower rate, plateaued or declined. Changes in log odds of OV/OB trends ranged from -0.03 to -0.07. In the period before the CF&B policies, OV/OB disparities widened between African American and Latino versus White males within each school-neighborhood income tertile; afterwards, disparities ceased to increase or slightly narrowed.

Discussion: The California CF&B laws for high schools are associated with favorable trends in youth OV/OB. This is the first study to examine these associations among multiple socio-demographically diverse high school youth simultaneously considering gender, school-neighborhood income and race/ethnicity. The degree to which observed changes in OV/OB trends are attributable to CF&B policies is unclear. Nevertheless, the results suggest that strengthening CF&B policies may help further reduce OV/OB among youth of different genders and ethnicities in schools across neighborhoods of varying income levels.

"竞争性 "食品饮料法与加州高中不同种族青少年的肥胖问题。
目的:调查加州 "竞争性 "食品和饮料(CF&B)法律与高中青少年超重/肥胖(OV/OB)之间的关联,按性别、学校-邻里收入和种族/族裔分列,并研究在CF&B政策出台前后种族/族裔OV/OB的差异:我们采用中断时间序列设计,配以来自 3,565,260 份加利福尼亚州公立学校九年级学生的青少年层面记录的回顾性横截面 Fitnessgram 数据,估算了 CF&B 政策生效前(2002-2007 年)和生效后(2008-2012 年)的性别、学校-邻里收入以及种族/族裔 OV/OB 流行趋势:结果:在校外自愿者/校内自愿者政策实施前,不论性别、学校邻里收入和种族/族裔,大多数亚群体的校外自愿者/校内自愿者流行率逐年上升。政策实施后,OV/OB 的增长速度放缓、趋于平稳或有所下降。OV/OB趋势的对数几率变化范围从-0.03到-0.07不等。在实施 CF&B 政策之前,非裔美国人和拉丁裔美国人与白人男性之间的 OV/OB 差距在每个学校-邻里收入三分位数中都有所扩大;实施 CF&B 政策之后,差距不再扩大或略有缩小:加利福尼亚州高中 CF&B 法与青少年 OV/OB 的有利趋势相关。这是第一项同时考虑性别、学校-邻里收入和种族/民族等因素,在多种社会人口统计差异的高中青少年中研究这些关联的研究。观察到的 OV/OB 趋势变化在多大程度上可归因于 CF&B 政策,目前尚不清楚。尽管如此,研究结果表明,加强 CF&B 政策可能有助于进一步减少不同性别和种族的青少年在不同收入水平的社区学校中的 OV/OB。
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来源期刊
Journal of Adolescent Health
Journal of Adolescent Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
10.40
自引率
3.90%
发文量
526
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Adolescent Health is a scientific publication dedicated to enhancing the health and well-being of adolescents and young adults. Our Journal covers a broad range of research topics, spanning from the basic biological and behavioral sciences to public health and policy. We welcome a variety of contributions, including original research papers, concise reports, literature reviews, clinical case reports, opinion pieces, and letters to the editor. We encourage professionals from diverse disciplines such as Anthropology, Education, Ethics, Global Health, Health Services Research, Law, Medicine, Mental and Behavioral Health, Nursing, Nutrition, Psychology, Public Health and Policy, Social Work, Sociology, and Youth Development to share their expertise and contribute to our mission of promoting adolescent health. Moreover, we value the voices of young individuals, family and community members, and healthcare professionals, and encourage them to submit poetry, personal narratives, images, and other creative works that provide unique insights into the experiences of adolescents and young adults. By combining scientific peer-reviewed research with creative expressions, our Journal aims to create a comprehensive understanding of the challenges and opportunities in adolescent and young adult health.
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