| Literature DB >> 25848853 |
Fatima Garawi, George B Ploubidis, Karen Devries, Nasser Al-Hamdan, Ricardo Uauy.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The prevalence of adult obesity is higher in women than men in most countries. However, the pathways that link female sex with excess obesity are still not fully understood. We examine whether socioeconomic and behavioural factors may mediate the association between sex and obesity in the Saudi Arabian setting where there is female excess in obesity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25848853 PMCID: PMC4371623 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-015-1608-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Figure 1Causal Diagram: Sex, the exposure variable, has both a direct effect on obesity (path c’) and an indirect effect on obesity (path a and b) via the mediators (SEP, physical activity, sedentary behaviour, smoking, diet). Age and region are covariates.
Sample characteristics
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| 15-24 yrs | 547 (23) | 529 (22) | 1,076 (22) |
| 25-34 yrs | 487 (21) | 643 (27) | 1,130 (24) |
| 35-44 yrs | 521 (22) | 646 (27) | 1,167 (25) |
| 45-54 yrs | 427 (18) | 414 (17) | 841 (18) |
| 55-64 yrs | 358 (15) | 186 (8) | 544 (11) |
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| Central | 575 (25) | 564 (23) | 1,139 (24) |
| Eastern | 351 (15) | 355 (15) | 706 (15) |
| Northern | 226 (10) | 229 (9) | 455 (10) |
| Southern | 494 (21) | 507 (21) | 1,001 (21) |
| Western | 694 (30) | 763 (32) | 1,457 (30) |
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| Primary school or less | 965 (41) | 1511 (63) | 2476 (52) |
| Secondary/vocational | 1001 (43) | 664 (27) | 1,665 (35) |
| College/Post-graduate | 370 (16) | 238 (10) | 608 (13) |
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| Less than 5000 SAR | 1123 (50) | 1380 (61) | 2503 (56) |
| 5000-10000 SAR | 750 (33) | 579 (26) | 1329 (29) |
| More than 10000 SAR | 365 (16) | 307 (14) | 672 (15) |
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| less than 1 serving per day | 599 (27) | 763 (32) | 1,362 (30) |
| 1-< 5 serving per day | 1410 (64) | 1518 (63) | 2,928 (64) |
| 5 or more servings per day | 185 (8) | 108 (5) | 293 (6) |
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| Low | 1353 (60) | 1713 (73) | 3,066 (67) |
| Moderate | 472 (21) | 299 (13) | 771 (17) |
| High | 426 (19) | 338 (14) | 764 (16) |
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| 0-180 minutes per day | 914 (41) | 1016 (45) | 1,930 (43) |
| 180-360 minutes per day | 838 (38) | 729 (33) | 1,567 (35) |
| 360+ minutes per day | 462 (21) | 496 (22) | 958 (22) |
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| Yes | 577 (25) | 34 (1) | 611 (14) |
| No | 1758 (75) | 2382 (99) | 4,140 (93) |
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| Yes | 580 (26) | 936 (40) | 1516 (33) |
| No | 1660 (74) | 1410 (60) | 3070 (67) |
Figure 2Proportion obese in the sample stratified by sex and age group.
Figure 3Female-to-male odds ratio and 95% CI for the sex parameter for various models testing informally for mediation. All models control for age and region.
Mediated effects of sex on obesity via the selected variables
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| Education | −3.62 (−3.99,–3.25) | −0.003 (−0.02,0.01) | 0.66 (0.48,0.87) | 0.002 (−0.01, 0.01) | 0.136 (0.10, 0.17) | 0.139 (0.11, 0.17) | 0.015 (0.01,0.02) |
| Household Income | −0.57 (−0.73,-0.40) | 0.20 (0.06, 0.34) | 0.69 (0.54, 0.84) | −0.005 (−0.01,–0.001) | 0.143 (0.11, 0.17) | 0.137 (0.11, 0.17) | −0.04 (−0.05,0.03) |
| Physical Activity Levels | −0.65 (−0.91,–0.38) | −0.02 (−0.17, 0.13) | 0.66 (0.46, 0.86) | 0.0004 (−0.003, 0.004) | 0.131 (0.10, 0.16) | 0.132 (0.10, 0.16) | 0.003 (0.002, 0.004) |
| Time spent sedentary | −0.11 (−0.32, 0.11) | 0.004 (−0.15, 0.14) | 0.71 (0.54, 0.88) | −0.00005 (−0.001, 0.002) | 0.1469 (0.12,0.18) | 0.1468 (0.12, 0.18) | −0.0003 (−0.0004,-0.0002) |
| Fruit/Veg consumption | −0.19 (−0.47, 0.08) | 0.23 (0.0, 0.41) | 0.66 (0.46, 0.86) | −0.002 (−0.005,–0.0007) | 0.13 (0.10, 0.16) | 0.128 (0.10, 0.16) | −0.02 (−0.02,-0.01) |
| Smoking | −3.24 (−3.83,–2.64) | −0.16 (−0.37, 0.06) | 0.67 (0.49, 0.85) | 0.007 (−0.004, 0.02) | 0.139 (0.11, 0.17) | 0.145 (0.12, 0.17) | 0.05 (0.04,0.06) |
Table provides estimates obtained from Stata’s medeff function. Estimates in the first three columns are obtained from the initial regression models that the function fits (described in Methods).
(1) The effect of sex on the mediator is obtained from a model regressing the mediator (as outcome) on sex and age. The coefficient and 95% confidence intervals (CI) for sex is shown in the first column. EST (estimate) is either beta coefficient from linear regression (in the case of education variable as the outcome) or log odds (all other variables. For significance at the 5% level, the 95% CI should not cross over 0.
(2) The effect of the mediator on obesity and the effect of sex on obesity are obtained from a single model regressing the outcome (obesity) on sex, the mediator, age, region, and mediator-outcome confounders. The log odds (CI) estimate for the mediator and sex are shown in the second and third column, respectively.
(3) The effects in columns 4–7 are derived by medeff based on the parameters in columns 1–3: Total Effect estimate is expressed as a proportion of the change in the probability of obesity. Similarly, indirect effect of sex on obesity via each of the mediators and direct effect of sex on obesity are also expressed as proportions. The direct effect is equivalent to c’ (third column) transformed on a probability scale. The last column reports the ratio of indirect effect to the total effect. A negative proportion of total effect mediated reflects inconsistent mediation.