[日本人自我报告的人体测量数据有多准确?范围综述]。

Tomoko Aoyama, Xiaoyi Yuan, Mai Matsumoto, Emiko Okada, Chika Okada, Hidemi Takimoto
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目标 监测普通人群中肥胖和体重不足的发生率对于实施有效的公共卫生措施至关重要。在此类流行病学监测中,通常使用自我报告的身高和体重值来评估身体质量指数(BMI)。然而,众所周知,使用自我报告的身高和体重可能会低估肥胖症(BMI≥25 kg/m2)的患病率,而其对体重不足(BMI2)患病率的准确性还不甚了解。本研究的目的是对肥胖和体重不足都很普遍的日本人口中自我报告人体测量学的准确性进行一次范围性综述。方法 使用 PubMed 和 CiNii Research 对 2022 年以前在日本进行的、以英语或日语发表的、比较自我报告和测量的身高、体重或/和 BMI 的研究进行文献检索。研究设计和平均报告误差(报告值平均值-测量值平均值)被提取出来并制成表格,BMI 类别的差异也被考虑在内。这些研究分别在全国范围内的队列研究(4 项)、当地人群(4 项)、工作场所(3 项)和教育机构(6 项)中进行,年龄范围(10-91 岁)和样本量(30,000 个)各不相同。虽然不同研究的平均报告误差程度各不相同,但大多数研究都报告了身高被高报、体重被低报以及 BMI 被低估的情况。在按体重指数(BMI)类别报告平均报告误差的三项研究中,身高的报告误差方向在所有体型类别中都保持一致,而体重和体重指数则被高报,只有体重不足者的报告误差被高估。四项成人研究表明,根据自我报告,14.2%-37.6% 的实际肥胖者和 11.1%-32.3%的体重不足者被误划为 "正常范围"(18.5≤BMI2),而 0.8%-5.4%和 1.2%-4.1%的实际体重在正常范围内的人被误划为 "正常范围"(18.5≤BMI2)。结论 本研究表明,根据自我报告的身高和体重使用 BMI 会低估日本人口中肥胖和体重不足的患病率。在流行病学研究中使用自我报告的人体测量数据时,应考虑到这些偏差。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
[How accurate are self-reported anthropometrics among the Japanese? A scoping review].

Objectives Monitoring of obesity and underweight prevalence in general populations is crucial for the implementation of effective public health measures. Self-reported height and weight values are often used to assess the body mass index (BMI) in such epidemiological surveillance. However, it is known that using self-reported height and weight may underestimate the prevalence of obesity (BMI≥25 kg/m2), while its accuracy for underweight (BMI<18.5 kg/m2) prevalence is not well-understood. The aim of this study was to conduct a scoping review on the accuracy of self-reported anthropometrics in the Japanese population, where both obesity and underweight are prevalent.Methods Using PubMed and CiNii Research, a literature search was conducted for studies published in English or Japanese by 2022 that were conducted in Japan and compared self-reported and measured height, weight, or/and BMI. The study design and mean reported errors (mean of reported values-mean of measured values) were extracted and tabulated, and differences by BMI categories were also considered.Results A total of 17 studies, with 11 being published in English, were included in this review. These studies were conducted in nationwide cohort studies (n=4), local populations (n=4), workplaces (n=3), and educational institutions (n=6), with diverse age ranges (10-91 years) and sample sizes (<100 to >30,000). Although the degree of mean reporting error varied between studies, most of the studies reported that height was overreported, weight was underreported, and BMI was underestimated. In the three studies that reported mean reporting errors by BMI category, the direction of reporting error for height remained consistent across all body size categories, while weight and BMI were overreported and overestimated only among the underweight. Four studies in adults showed that 14.2-37.6% of actually obese individuals and 11.1-32.3% of underweight individuals were misclassified as 'normal range' (18.5≤BMI<25 kg/m2) based on self-reporting, while 0.8-5.4% and 1.2-4.1% of individuals actually within the normal range were misclassified as 'underweight' and 'obese' based on self-report, respectively.Conclusion This study suggests that using BMI based on self-reported height and weight can underestimate the prevalence of both obesity and underweight in the Japanese population. These biases should be taken into consideration when using self-reported anthropometrics in epidemiological studies.

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