| Literature DB >> 23663279 |
Maryam Delavari1, Anders Larrabee Sønderlund, Boyd Swinburn, David Mellor, Andre Renzaho.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is evidence to suggest that immigrant populations from low or medium-income countries to high income countries show a significant change in obesogenic behaviors in the host society, and that these changes are associated with acculturation. However, the results of studies vary depending on how acculturation is measured. The objective of this study is to systematically review the evidence on the relationship between acculturation--as measured with a standardized acculturation scale--and overweight/obesity among adult migrants from low/middle countries to high income countries.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23663279 PMCID: PMC3654930 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-13-458
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Search strategy including databases, keywords, and limits
| Databases searched | Academic Search Complete (EBSCOhost); Academic Search Premier (EBSCOhost); CINAHL with Full Text (EBSCOhost); Global Health (EBSCOhost); MEDLINE with Full Text (EBSCOhost); and PsycINFO (EBSCOhost). |
| Key Words | MeSH keywords: (Obes* OR Overweight OR Weight gain OR Bodyweight OR Body mass index OR Waist-hip ratio) AND (Enculturat* OR Acculturat* OR assimilat* OR Integrat* OR Cultural change OR Biculturalism OR Cultural integration OR Culture diffusion OR Cultural adaptation OR Cultural shift Or Social integration) |
| Inclusion criteria | i. The study was published in a peer-reviewed scientific journal. |
Figure 1Process of study selection.
Studies included in systematic review
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| Ahluwalia et al., [ | USA | Mexico (1301, female: 664 male: 637) | Cross-sectional | Bi-dimensional acculturation scale (BDM) | Measured BMI, waist circumference | Higher degree of acculturation correlated with higher BMI. Among participants with a BMI ≥ 25, lower scores on acculturation predicted less likelihood of considering self as overweight (60% vs. 73%) and less likely of having attempted to lose weight (OR 5 0.49; 95% CI: 0.31–0.79). | Moderate | Certain sample subgroups were too small for empirical examination. Despite using the BDM acculturation model, the analysis treated as a UDM. |
| Barcenas et al., [ | USA | Mexico (7503, female: 5471, male: 2032) | Cross-sectional | Bi-dimensional Acculturation Scale for Hispanics (BDM) | Self-reported BMI | Higher degree of acculturation and length of residency in the US were correlated with higher BMI: 46% of highly acculturated participants were obese compared with 43% with a low degree of acculturation ( | High | Self-reported BMI cannot be verified and may bias results. |
| Bertera et al., [ | USA | El Salvador (1205, female: 581 male: 624) | Cross-sectional | Uni-dimensional acculturation scale (UDM) | Measured BMI | Higher degree of acculturation was associated with higher BMI. As acculturation increased so too did BMI, and together with other variables accounted for 45% of the variance in BMI ( | Moderate | Self-reported BMI cannot be verified and may bias results. |
| Fitzgerald et al., [ | USA | Puerto Rico (200 female) | Cross-sectional | Uni-dimensional acculturation scale (UDM) | Measured BMI | Higher degree of acculturation was associated with higher BMI. Acculturation correlated positively with obesity; with less acculturated participants were 54% less likely to be obese. | Moderate | Data collection methods were not adequately reported. |
| Franzen et al., [ | USA | Thailand/Laos, Hmong (65, female: 48, male: 17) | Cross-sectional | Short Acculturation Scale for Hispanics (BDM) | Measured BMI | Higher degree of acculturation was associated with higher BMI. Changes in the environment and increased acculturation level had negative effects on body weight and overall health. | Moderate | Participant attrition was not adequately reported. |
| Hazuda et al., [ | USA | Mexico (2941, female: 1677, male: 1264) | Cross-sectional | Functional Integration with Mainstream Society scale (FIMS-scale), Value Placed on Preserving Mexican Cultural Origin scale (VPPMCO-scale) (BDM) | Measured BMI, sub scapular to triceps skin-fold thickness ratio, waist-to-hip circumference ratio. | In men, higher degree of acculturation was associated with higher BMI and less favourable body fat distribution. In women, higher degree of acculturation was associated with lower BMI and a more favourable body fat distribution ( | High | -- |
| Khan et al., [ | USA | Mexico (female: 1723, male 1418)-, Cuba (female: 451, male 377)-, and Puerto Rican- (female: 747, male: 64) (5180) | Cross-sectional | Uni-dimensional acculturation scale (UDM) | Measured BMI | Spanish language preference correlated positively with obesity, and acculturation measurement of generations correlated positively with obesity ( | Moderate | The sample included second and third generation Cuban-Americans and Puerto Ricans as well as first generation migrants. For 2nd and 3rd generations, there was no full description of the process of acculturation for these subgroups of the sample. This may compromise comparability. |
| Lee et al., [ | USA | Korea(356, female: ?, men: ?) | Cross-sectional | Two-culture Matrix Model based on Gordon’s theoretical work (BDM) | Self-reported BMI | Assimilated men recorded higher BMIs (1.7kg/m2 more) than men with lower degrees of acculturation ( | Moderate | Sample included second generation Korean Americans, and was generally of a higher SES than 1990 census. |
| Miller et al., [ | USA | Soviet Union women (218) | Longitudinal (1 year duration) | American and Russian Behavioural Acculturation Scale (BDM) | Measured BMI & waist circumference | Maintaining origin cultural orientation correlated positively with higher waist circumference (β = −.15, | High | -- |