Shirley Aa Beresford, Deborah J Bowen, Alyson J Littman, Denise L Albano, Kc Gary Chan, Shelby L Langer, Wendy E Barrington, Donald L Patrick
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Obesity rates differ between Hispanic and White (non-Hispanic) women in the United States, with higher rates among Hispanic women. Socioeconomic processes contribute to this disparity both at the individual and the environmental level. Understanding these complex relationships requires multilevel analyses within cohorts of women that have a shared environment. In population-based samples of Hispanic and White (non-Hispanic) women from the same neighborhoods, we evaluated within each ethnic group a) The association of individual-level socioeconomic status (SES) with body mass index (BMI); and b) The additional contribution of neighborhood-level measures of SES.
Methods: Using population-based multi-stage sampling methods, we oversampled low SES and Hispanic block groups. During household screening, we identified women aged 30 to 50 years. Among White women, we specifically oversampled women with low educational levels. 515 Hispanic and 503 White women completed baseline. Height and weight were measured. Baseline surveys, in Spanish and English, included four measures of SES. Three measures of area-level SES were examined. Analysis of loge BMI on each SES measure used linear mixed models, incorporating design effects.
Results: Among White women, low education, social status, and neighborhood SES were associated with higher BMI (p < 0.001, p < 0.0001, and p < 0.05, respectively), independent of other SES measures. Although the highest grouped category of education, income and subjective social status within the Hispanic cohort had the lowest mean estimated BMI, the point estimates across categories were not monotonic, and had wide confidence intervals. As a result, in contrast to the findings among White women, no statistically significant associations were found between BMI and measures of SES among Hispanic women.
Discussion: Neighborhood and individual measures of SES operate differently in Hispanic compared with White women. We had assumed the measures we included to be most salient and operate similarly for both groups of women. Rather the salient factors for Hispanic women have yet to be identified. Improved understanding may ultimately inform the design of culturally-relevant multilevel obesity prevention strategies.
背景:在美国,西班牙裔妇女和白人(非西班牙裔)妇女的肥胖率不同,西班牙裔妇女的肥胖率更高。社会经济过程在个人和环境层面上造成了这种差异。要了解这些复杂的关系,需要在具有共同环境的妇女群体中进行多层次分析。在同一社区的西班牙裔和白人(非西班牙裔)妇女人群样本中,我们评估了每个种族群体中 a) 个人层面的社会经济地位(SES)与体重指数(BMI)的关系;以及 b) 社区层面的社会经济地位的额外贡献:我们采用基于人口的多阶段抽样方法,对低社会经济地位群体和西班牙裔街区群体进行了超量抽样。在家庭筛查中,我们确定了 30 至 50 岁的女性。在白人妇女中,我们特别对教育水平较低的妇女进行了超额抽样。515 名西班牙裔妇女和 503 名白人妇女完成了基线调查。测量了身高和体重。用西班牙语和英语进行的基线调查包括四项 SES 测量。对地区水平 SES 的三种测量方法进行了研究。采用线性混合模型对每种 SES 测量值的 loge BMI 进行分析,并纳入设计效应:在白人女性中,低教育程度、社会地位和邻里社会经济地位与较高的体重指数相关(分别为 p < 0.001、p < 0.0001 和 p < 0.05),与其他社会经济地位衡量标准无关。尽管在西班牙裔人群中,教育、收入和主观社会地位分组最高的类别的估计体重指数平均值最低,但不同类别的点估计值并非单调,且置信区间较大。因此,与白人女性的研究结果不同,西班牙裔女性的体重指数与社会经济地位之间没有统计学意义上的显著关联:讨论:与白人女性相比,西语裔女性的邻里和个人社会经济地位衡量标准的运作方式有所不同。我们曾假定我们所纳入的衡量标准是最突出的,并且对两组女性的作用类似。但西班牙裔女性的突出因素仍有待确定。提高对这些因素的认识最终将有助于设计与文化相关的多层次肥胖预防策略。