| Literature DB >> 27608963 |
Monica Hunsberger1, Susanna Lehtinen-Jacks2, Kirsten Mehlig3, Wencke Gwozdz4, Paola Russo5, Nathalie Michels6, Karin Bammann7, Iris Pigeot8,9, Juan Miguel Fernández-Alvira10, Barbara Franziska Thumann9, Dénes Molnar11, Toomas Veidebaum12, Charalambos Hadjigeorgiou13, Lauren Lissner3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The negative impact of childhood overweight on psychosocial well-being has been demonstrated in a number of studies. There is also evidence that psychosocial well-being may influence future overweight. We examined the bidirectional association between childhood overweight and psychosocial well-being in children from a large European cohort. The dual aim was to investigate the chronology of associations between overweight and psychosocial health indicators and the extent to which these associations may be explained by parental education.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood overweight; European cohort; Health-related quality of life; KINDL®; Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27608963 PMCID: PMC5017061 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3626-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Bidirectional associations between overweight including obesity (OWOB) and two dichotomized indicators of psychosocial health, poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL) and poor well-being (PWB)
| A: Incidence of poor health | ||||
| Modela | Predictor at baseline | Subsample | Outcome |
|
| No OWOB at baseline ( | OWOB at follow-up | |||
| 1a | PHRQOL | 0.95 (0.78, 1.15) | 0.58 | |
| 1b | PWB | 1.39 (1.03, 1.86) | 0.03 | |
| 1cb | PWB without PHRQOL | 1.02 (0.56, 1.86) | 0.95 | |
| PWB with PHRQOL | 1.68 (1.16, 2.42) | 0.006 | ||
| PWB × PHRQOL | 1.63 (0.81, 3.29) | 0.17 | ||
| No PHRQOL at baseline ( | PHRQOL at follow-up | |||
| 2 | OWOB | 1.23 (1.03, 1.48) | 0.02 | |
| No PWB at baseline ( | PWB at follow-up | |||
| 3 | OWOB | 1.05 (0.79, 1.41) | 0.74 | |
| B: Recovery from poor health | ||||
| OWOB at baseline ( | No OWOB at follow-up | |||
| 1a | Good health related quality of life | 0.87 (0.61, 1.24) | 0.44 | |
| 1b | Good well-being | 1.38 (0.84, 2.27) | 0.21 | |
| PHRQOL at baseline ( | No PHRQOL at follow-up | |||
| 2 | No OWOB | 1.04 (0.84, 1.30) | 0.70 | |
| PWB at baseline ( | No PWB at follow-up | |||
| 3 | No OWOB | 1.33 (0.87, 2.02) | 0.19 | |
The top part of the table refers to the incidence of poor health in the subsample of children without symptoms at baseline (A). The bottom part of the table considers the recovery from poor health in the subsample of children with corresponding symptoms at baseline (B)
Footnotes: OR (95 % CI): odds ratio (95 % confidence interval)
Overweight including obesity (OWOB), defined according to Cole 2012 and poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL) measured by KINDL® and poor well-being (PWB) measured by Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
aLogistic regression adjusted for age, sex, parental education, intervention, and country
bModel 1c investigates the interaction between PWB and PHRQOL at baseline with respect to OWOB at follow-up in children without overweight at baseline
Descriptive characteristics in analytic sample (n = 7,831 measured at baseline, 2007/08 and 2 year follow-up, 2009/10), in subjects with poor health outcome (overweight including obesity (OWOB), poor well-being (PWB), and poor health related quality of life (PHRQL)
| Poor health outcome at two time points | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| OWOB, n (row %) | PWB, n (row %) | PHRQOL, n (row %) | ||||
| Year | 2007/2008 ( | 2009/2010 ( | 2007/2008 ( | 2009/2010 ( | 2007/2008 ( | 2009/2010 ( |
| Background variable | ||||||
| Sex | ||||||
| Boys | 661 (16.7) | 873 (22.0) | 370 (9.3) | 342 (8.6) | 1,259 (31.8) | 1,291 (32.6) |
| Girls | 758 (19.6) | 917 (23.7) | 246 (6.4) | 244 (6.3) | 1,121 (29.0) | 1,145 (29.6) |
| Age | ||||||
| Pre-school 2- < 6 years | 430 (12.3) | 609 (17.4) | 262 (7.5) | 218 (6.2) | 874 (25.0) | 879 (25.1) |
| School age 6- < 10 years | 989 (22.8) | 1,181 (27.2) | 354 (8.2) | 368 (8.5) | 1,506 (34.7) | 1,557 (35.9) |
| Parental education (ISCED) | ||||||
| Level 1 | 167 (37.8) | 183 (44.7) | 62 (15.2) | 60 (14.7) | 173 (39.1) | 148 (36.2) |
| Level 2 | 569 (21.4) | 701 (27.3) | 228 (8.9) | 207 (8.1) | 883 (33.2) | 838 (32.6) |
| Level 3 | 208 (15.5) | 283 (20.6) | 110 (8.0) | 110 (8.0) | 373 (27.8) | 438 (31.8) |
| Level 4 | 460 (13.9) | 594 (17.6) | 197 (5.8) | 198 (5.9) | 918 (27.6) | 975 (28.8) |
| Country | ||||||
| Belgium | 59 (6.1) | 95 (9.8) | 79 (8.2) | 100 (10.3) | 205 (21.2) | 236 (24.4) |
| Cyprus | 197 (25.1) | 250 (31.9) | 84 (10.7) | 71 (9.0) | 364 (46.4) | 333 (42.4) |
| Estonia | 158 (14.3) | 186 (16.9) | 79 (7.2) | 89 (8.1) | 270 (24.5) | 356 (32.3) |
| Germany | 103 (13.2) | 125 (16.1) | 73 (9.4) | 72 (9.3) | 191 (24.6) | 166 (21.3) |
| Hungary | 115 (13.0) | 174 (19.7) | 69 (7.8) | 59 (6.7) | 457 (51.8) | 373 (42.2) |
| Italy | 471 (42.5) | 567 (51.1) | 112 (10.1) | 90 (8.1) | 431 (38.9) | 408 (36.8) |
| Spain | 192 (19.3) | 249 (25.0) | 94 (9.5) | 75 (7.5) | 259 (26.0) | 360 (36.2) |
| Sweden | 124 (10.3) | 144 (11.9) | 26 (2.5) | 30 (2.5) | 203 (16.8) | 204 (16.9) |
Footnote: Overweight including obesity (OWOB), defined according to Cole 2012 and poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL) measured by KINDL® and poor well-being (PWB) measured by Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire. Statistical testing included χ 2-test of differences in the prevalence of a poor health outcome (OWOB, PHRQOL, PWB, at baseline and 2 year follow-up) between categories of each of the 4 background variables (sex, pre-school v. school age, parental education and country). All other associations were statistically significant, except for: sex and prevalent OWOB 2009/2010, p = 0.07 and pre-school versus school age and PWB 2007/2008, p = 0.27
Cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between overweight including obesity (OWOB, and two dichotomized indicators of psychosocial health, poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL), and poor well-being (PWB), in the entire sample of children (n = 7,831) with measures at baseline (2007/08) and at follow-up (2009/10)
| PHRQOL | PWB | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Study year | 2007/08 | 2009/10 | 2007/08 | 2009/10 |
| OR (95 % CI)a | OR (95 % CI)a | OR (95 % CI)a | OR (95 % CI)a | |
| OWOB at baseline (2007/08) | 1.03 (0.90, 1.17) | 1.10 (0.96, 1.25) | 1.18 (0.95, 1.46) | 1.04 (0.83, 1.30) |
| OWOB at follow-up (2009/10) | 1.00 (0.89, 1.14) | 1.07 (0.95, 1.21) | 1.22 (1.00, 1.48) | 1.26 (1.03, 1.54) |
Footnotes: OR (95 % CI): odds ratio (95 % confidence interval)
Overweight including obesity (OWOB), defined according to Cole 2012 and poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL) measured by KINDL® and poor well-being (PWB) measured by Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire
alogistic regression of weight status on indicators of psychosocial health, adjusted for age, sex, parental education, intervention and country
Fig. 1Odds ratios (OR) for incident BMI status defined as overweight including obesity (OWOB) according to Cole 2012 and two dichotomized indicators of psychosocial health, poor health related quality of life (PHRQOL) measured by KINDL® and poor well-being (PWB) measured by Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire and 95 % confidence intervals (95 % CI). Baseline refers to year 2007/2008 and follow-up to 2009/2010