| Literature DB >> 23666817 |
Philippa J Clarke1, Patrick M O'Malley, John E Schulenberg, Hedwig Lee, Natalie Colabianchi, Lloyd D Johnston.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Research conducted on school-based interventions suggests that school connectedness protects against a variety of risk behaviors, including substance abuse, delinquency and sedentary behavior. The line of research is extended by examining the link between college expectations and early adult weight gain using nationally representative panel data from thirty cohorts of American high school seniors followed prospectively to age 30 in the Monitoring the Future Study (1986-2009). DESIGN AND METHODS: Growth mixture models identified two latent classes of trajectories of body mass index (BMI) from age 19 to 30: a persistently overweight class (BMI ≥ 25) and a second class exhibiting more moderate growth in BMI to age 30.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23666817 PMCID: PMC3742647 DOI: 10.1002/oby.20176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obesity (Silver Spring) ISSN: 1930-7381 Impact factor: 5.002
Figure 1Generalized Growth Mixture Model for BMI over Early Adulthood: the Future Study (age 19–30) 1986–2009
BMI 19/20 - BMI 29/30 refer to BMI scores at each of the 6 waves of data collection (age 19 through age 30)
BMI = Body mass index
SES = Socioeconomic status
Descriptive Statistics for Study Sample (age 19–30) Monitoring the Future Study 1986–2009 (N=10,099)
| Weighted percent or mean (SD) | |
|---|---|
| Female | 52.33 % |
| White | 74.20 % |
| Non-Hispanic Black | 11.66 % |
| Hispanic | 7.15 % |
| Other race/ethnicity | 6.99 % |
| Childhood SES | |
| Parents have high school education or less | 56.33 % |
| Parents have college degree or higher | 43.67 % |
| Average Grade in High School | 84.64 (6.95) |
| College expectations (probability ranges from 0 to 1.0) | .68 (.35) |
| Definitely won’t (probability=0) | 15.89 % |
| Probably won’t (probability=0.25) | 13.60 % |
| Probably will (probability=0.75) | 22.10 % |
| Definitely will (probability=1.0) | 48.42 % |
| Class of 1976–1985 | 34.08 % |
| Class of 1986–1995 | 34.78 % |
| Class of 1996–2005 | 31.14 % |
| Age 19/20 | 23.28 (3.70) |
| Age 21/22 | 23.84 (3.89) |
| Age 23/24 | 24.29 (4.07) |
| Age 25/26 | 24.68 (4.17) |
| Age 27/28 | 24.99 (4.18) |
| Age 29/30 | 25.42 (4.26) |
SES=socioeconomic status. BMI=body mass index. SD = standard deviation
Baseline refers to senior year of high school.
Growth Mixture Model Regression Coefficients for BMI Trajectories Age 19–30 Monitoring the Future Study (1986–2009)33
|
| |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Intercept | 23.07 | 21.65 | 26.76 |
| Slope (age) | .28 | .22 | .43 |
| Goodness of Fit | BIC=166471.12 | BIC=163571.72 | |
| Statistics | AIC=166355.60 | AIC=163412.88 | |
p<.05
p<.01
p<.001
p<.10 (two-tailed tests)
(Note: model allows for growth factors to have different variances in each class)
Figure 2BMI Trajectories over Early Adulthood (MTF 1986–2009): Growth Mixture Model Showing 2 Class Solution
Note: Observed BMI means and 95% confidence intervals are also illustrated
- - - - - - - - Class 1 (78%) – Normative Weight Gain
––––––––––––– Class 2 (22%) – Persistently Overweight
Logistic Regression for Latent Class Membership: Monitoring the Future Study (age 19–30) 1986–2009
| Latent Class 2 | ||
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| Coefficient | OR (95% CI) | |
| Female | .36 | 1.43 (1.13, 1.82) |
| Non-Hispanic Black | .61 | 1.83 (1.36, 2.48) |
| Hispanic | .26 | 1.29 (0.90, 1.86) |
| Other | .06 | 1.06 (.76, 1.46) |
| Low Childhood SES | .51 | 1.67 (1.40, 2.00) |
| High School Cohort 1986–1995 | .82 | 2.27 (1.84, 2.80) |
| High School Cohort 1996–2005 | 1.12 | 3.07 (2.42, 3.90) |
| College Expectations | −.41 | 0.66 (0.54, 0.81) |
| Average Grade in High School | −.30 | .74 (.66, .83) |
Latent Class 1 (normative weight gain) is the reference class
Reference group is Male
Reference group is White
Refers to those whose parents have a high school education or less; reference group is parents with a college degree or higher
Reference group is high school cohort 1976–1985
SES=socioeconomic status
OR = adjusted odds ratio
CI = confidence interval
p<.05
p<.01
p<.001 (two-tailed tests)
Regressing Growth Parameters on Sociodemographic Characteristics by Latent Class of BMI Trajectory: Monitoring the Future Study (age 19–30) 1986–2009
| Latent Class 1 (Normative Class) | Latent Class 2 (Persistently Overweight) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Intercept | Slope | Intercept | Slope | |
| Female | −2.04 | −.10 | .18 (.27) | .23 |
| Black | .27 (.16) | .08 | .46 (.51) | .04 (.05) |
| Hispanic | .25 (.19) | .04 (.03) | .47 (.53) | .03 (.06) |
| Other | −.60 | −.01 (.02) | −.95 | −.01 (.06) |
| Low Childhood SES | −.13 (.08) | .03 | .12 (.28) | .01 (.03) |
| High School Cohort 1986–1995 | .22 | .04 | −.01 (.39) | .15 |
| High School Cohort 1996–2005 | .62 | .03 (.01) | 1.92 | .21 |
Note: cell entries are unstandardized regression coefficients; standard errors are in parentheses under the parameter estimates.
p<.05
p<.01
p<.001 (two-tailed tests)
SES=socioeconomic status
Reference group is Male
Reference group is White.
Refers to those whose parents have a high school education or less; reference group is parents with a college degree or higher.
Reference group is High School Cohort 1976–1985.