Literature DB >> 15075153

Association of weight change with ethnicity and life course socioeconomic position among Brazilian civil servants.

Dóra Chor1, Eduardo Faerstein, George A Kaplan, John W Lynch, Claudia S Lopes.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Adult weight gain is generally associated with ethnicity of African descent, in addition to low socioeconomic position (SEP), but little information is available from the African diaspora in less-developed countries. We evaluated ethnic differences in adult weight change and the role of life course SEP in those differences.
METHODS: We conducted a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data (1999-2001) from 2594 non-faculty civil servants working at university campuses in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and participating in the longitudinal Pró-Saúde Study. Weight and height were measured at study entry whereas ethnicity, markers of SEP, and weight at age 20 were assessed through self-administered questionnaire.
RESULTS: Black and mulatto women gained, respectively, an excess of 1.6 kg and 1.2 kg per 10 years of adult life, compared with whites. After adjustment for markers of participants' early and later-life SEP, the estimates of excess weight gain for black and mulatto women decreased by about one-third, but a statistically significant estimate was still observed for black women. Among men, neither unadjusted nor adjusted ethnic gradients in weight gain were relevant.
CONCLUSIONS: Only among women, black and mulatto ethnicity was associated with increased weight gain, which was partially explained through the association with their lower SEP.

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Mesh:

Year:  2004        PMID: 15075153     DOI: 10.1093/ije/dyg277

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Epidemiol        ISSN: 0300-5771            Impact factor:   7.196


  16 in total

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9.  Years worked at night and body mass index among registered nurses from eighteen public hospitals in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Authors:  Rosane Härter Griep; Leonardo S Bastos; Maria de Jesus Mendes da Fonseca; Aline Silva-Costa; Luciana Fernandes Portela; Susanna Toivanen; Lucia Rotenberg
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10.  Association of family income with BMI from childhood to adult life: a birth cohort study.

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