七个拉丁美洲城市肥胖、腹部肥胖和代谢综合征的教育不平等:CARMELA研究。

Carlos Boissonnet, Herman Schargrodsky, Fabio Pellegrini, Alejandro Macchia, Beatriz Marcet Champagne, Elinor Wilson, Gianni Tognoni
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引用次数: 53

摘要

目的:早期的综述发现,社会经济地位与肥胖之间的负相关比例随着研究国家的发展水平而增加。基于这一发现,人们假设,在中低收入国家,随着国家的发展,肥胖的负担向弱势群体转移。方法和结果:CARMELA是一项横断面、基于人群的观察性研究,从拉丁美洲7个主要城市中抽取了11,550名年龄在25-64岁之间的男性和女性。我们按性别分析了受教育程度(代表社会经济地位)与体重指数、腰围和代谢综合征的关系。参与城市按国家人类发展指数(HDI)划分。在高人类发展指数城市(布宜诺斯艾利斯、圣地亚哥、墨西哥)中,女性社会经济地位和体重指数之间的梯度呈反比,但在中等人类发展指数城市(巴基西梅托、波哥大、利马、基多)中则没有,其中两个城市呈反比梯度,另两个城市则没有。在男性中,没有发现明显的社会经济梯度。有关腰围和代谢综合征的研究结果与有关体重指数的研究结果密切相关。结论:在女性中,而不是男性中,这些结果支持肥胖向穷人转移的假设,并将其扩展到腹部肥胖和代谢综合征的相关概念。肥胖应被视为一种社会产生的疾病和社会经济劣势的指标,应通过考虑到这一观点的综合战略加以解决。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Educational inequalities in obesity, abdominal obesity, and metabolic syndrome in seven Latin American cities: the CARMELA Study.

Aims: Earlier reviews have found that the proportion of inverse associations between socioeconomic status and obesity increased according to the level of development of the studied country. Based on this finding, it has been hypothesized that in low- to middle- income countries the burden of obesity shifts to disadvantaged groups as a country develops.

Methods and results: CARMELA is a cross-sectional, population-based observational study that sampled 11,550 women and men age 25-64 from seven major Latin American cities. We analyzed by gender the association of educational attainments (as proxy of socioeconomic status) with body mass index, waist circumference and metabolic syndrome. Participating cities were divided by country Human Development Index (HDI). An inverse gradient between socioeconomic status and body mass index in women was uniformly present in High HDI cities (Buenos Aires, Santiago, Mexico) but not in Medium HDI group (Barquisimeto, Bogota, Lima, Quito), where two cities showed an inverse gradient and two cities did not. In men, no clear socioeconomic gradients were found. Findings regarding waist circumference and metabolic syndrome closely mirrored those about body mass index.

Conclusion: In women but not men, these results give support to the hypothesis of obesity shifting to the poor and extend it to the related concepts of abdominal obesity and metabolic syndrome. Obesity should be considered as a socially-generated disease and an indicator of socioeconomic disadvantage, to be approached by comprehensive strategies that bear in mind this perspective.

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