| Literature DB >> 30396350 |
Elena Raptou1, Georgios Papastefanou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: This study explored the influence of cigarette smoking and food consumption patterns on BMI after adjusting for various socio-demographic characteristics. Since weight-based stereotypes may have an impact on smoking behaviour and both obesity and smoking have been associated with detrimental health effects, an interdependency between them is quite possible.Entities:
Keywords: BMI; Endogeneity bias; Endogenous treatment effects model; Food consumption patterns; Obesity; Ordered outcome; Smoking behaviour
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30396350 PMCID: PMC6217773 DOI: 10.1186/s12937-018-0408-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutr J ISSN: 1475-2891 Impact factor: 3.271
Characteristics of the study participants
| Variables | Total | Males | Females | Chi-square | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 3.157 | 0.206 | |||
| 18–29 years old | 583 (16.8%) | 308 (17.5%) | 275 (16.1%) | ||
| 30–60 years old | 1899 (54.8%) | 938 (53.3%) | 961 (56.3%) | ||
| Older than 60 years | 986 (28.4%) | 514 (29.2%) | 472 (27.6%) | ||
| Marital status |
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| |||
| Married | 1998 (57.6%) | 1039 (59.0%) | 959 (56.2%) | ||
| Divorced/widowed | 496 (14.3%) | 165 (9.4%) | 331 (19.4%) | ||
| Single | 973 (28.1%) | 556 (31.6%) | 417 (24.4%) | ||
| Area of residence | 2.660 | 0.264 | |||
| Big city | 1104 (31.8%) | 564 (32.0%) | 540 (31.6%) | ||
| Town | 1006 (29.0%) | 490 (27.8%) | 516 (30.2%) | ||
| Village/Rural area | 1360 (39.2) | 708(40.2%) | 652 (38.2%) | ||
| Educational attainment |
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| |||
| Up to secondary education | 1993 (57.5%) | 973 (55.3%) | 1020 (59.8%) | ||
| Post-secondary education | 767 (22.1%) | 386 (21.9%) | 381 (22.3%) | ||
| Postgraduate studies | 706 (20.4%) | 400 (22.7%) | 306 (17.9%) | ||
| Frequent consumption of: | |||||
| Whole grain bread | 2096 (60.4%) | 982 (55.8%) | 1114 (65.2%) |
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| White-toasted bread | 983 (28.3%) | 581 (33.0%) | 402 (23.5%) |
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| Fruits | 2305 (66.4%) | 995 (56.5%) | 1310 (76.7%) |
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| Fresh-frozen vegetables | 1534 (44.2%) | 621 (35.3%) | 913 (53.4%) |
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| Meat products | 2882 (83.1%) | 1590 (90.3%) | 1292 (75.6%) |
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| Deep fried foods | 274 (7.9%) | 188 (10.7%) | 86 (5.0%) |
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| Confectionery | 1957 (56.4%) | 949 (53.9%) | 1008 (59.0%) |
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| BMI |
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| |||
| Underweight | 67 (2.0%) | 14 (0.8%) | 53 (3.2%) | ||
| Normal weight | 1503 (44.0%) | 663 (37.8%) | 840 (50.5%) | ||
| Overweight | 1230 (36.0%) | 735 (41.9%) | 495 (29.7%) | ||
| Obese | 619 (18.0%) | 342 (19.5%) | 277 (16.6%) | ||
| Smoking behaviour | |||||
| Smoker (Smoking participation) | 998 (28.8%) | 586 (33.3%) | 412 (24.1%) |
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| ||||
| Smoking prevalencea | 25.365 (5.236) | 30.005 (2.492) | 20.581 (2.046) |
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aMean, standard deviation in parentheses
(Statistically significant variables are highlighted in bold)
BMI estimates of the univariate ordered probit model with no assumption of endogeneity between smoking and body weight
| Variables | BMI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full sample | Males | Females | |
| Smoker (smoking participation) | − 0.058 | − 0.089 | − 0.022 |
| (0.045) | (0.060) | (0.068) | |
| Sociodemographic characteristicsa | |||
| Gender (women) |
| – | – |
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| |||
| 30–60 years old |
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| Over 60 years old |
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| Married |
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| |
| Divorced/widowed |
| 0.157 |
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| (0.110) |
| |
| Big city |
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| |
| Village/Rural area | 0.060 | 0.047 | 0.091 |
| (0.047) | (0.066) | (0.067) | |
| Frequent consumption of: | |||
| Whole grain bread | −0.029 | −0.088 | 0.041 |
| (0.040) | (0.056) | (0.060) | |
| White/toasted bread | −0.053 |
| 0.044 |
| (0.043) |
| (0.066) | |
| Fruits | −0.023 | −0.044 | 0.017 |
| (0.045) | (0.060) | (0.071) | |
| Vegetables | −0.023 | 0.031 | −0.063 |
| (0.042) | (0.060) | (0.059) | |
| Meat products |
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| Deep fried foods | −0.016 | −0.121 | 0.160 |
| (0.074) | (0.091) | (0.132) | |
| Confectionery |
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| |
| μ1 | −1.742 | −1.984 | −1.287 |
| μ2 | 0.359 | 0.280 | 0.768 |
| μ3 | 1.428 | 1.483 | 1.690 |
| Log-Likelihood | − 3644.031 | − 1835.938 | − 1780.192 |
Standard errors are given in parentheses
aAge: 18–29 years old (reference category), Marital status: single (reference category)
Area of residence: town (reference category)
*p < 0.1, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.01 (Statistically significant variables are highlighted in bold)
Smoking status estimates (treatment equation) of the endogenous treatment effects model with an ordered outcome considering potential endogeneity between smoking and body weight
| Variables | Smoking participation | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full sample | Males | Females | |
| Sociodemographic characteristicsa | |||
| Gender (women) |
| – | – |
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| |||
| 30–60 years old |
|
| 0.195 |
|
|
| (0.164) | |
| Over 60 years old |
|
|
|
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|
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| |
| Married |
| −0.186 |
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|
| (0.127) |
| |
| Divorced/widowed | 0.137 | 0.302 | 0.043 |
| (0.128) | (0.187) | (0.179) | |
| Big city | 0.026 | 0.031 | −0.007 |
| (0.088) | (0.121) | (0.130) | |
| Village/Rural area |
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| − 0.153 |
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| (0.123) | |
| Post-secondary education |
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| Post-graduate studies |
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| Frequent consumption of: | |||
| Whole grain bread |
| − 0.124 |
|
|
| (0.095) |
| |
| White-toasted bread |
|
| −0.057 |
|
|
| (0.124) | |
| Fruits |
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| |
| Vegetables |
| 0.137 |
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| (0.104) |
| |
| Meat products |
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| Deep fried foods | 0.119 | 0.157 | 0.102 |
| (0.126) | (0.151) | (0.228) | |
| Confectionery |
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| Smoking prevalence |
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| Log-Likelihood function | − 1797.997 | − 975.637 | − 808.419 |
Standard errors are given in parentheses
aAge: 18–29 years old (reference category), Marital status: single (reference category)
Area of residence: town (reference category), Educational attainment: up to secondary education (reference category)
*p < 0.1, **p < 0.05, ***p < 0.01 (Statistically significant variables are highlighted in bold)
BMI estimates (outcome equation) of the endogenous treatment effects model with an ordered outcome considering potential endogeneity between smoking and body weight
| Variables | BMI | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Full sample | Males | Females | |
| Smoker (smoking participation) |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Sociodemographic characteristicsa | |||
| Gender (women) |
| – | – |
|
| |||
| 30–60 years old |
|
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|
|
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| |
| Over 60 years old |
|
|
|
|
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| |
| Married |
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Divorced/widowed |
| 0.158 |
|
|
| (0.180) |
| |
| Big city |
| −0.169 |
|
|
| (0.110) |
| |
| Village/Rural area |
| 0.130 | 0.116 |
|
| (0.107) | (0.079) | |
| Frequent consumption of: | |||
| Whole grain bread | 0.014 | −0.075 | 0.080 |
| (0.059) | (0.087) | (0.070) | |
| White-toasted bread |
|
| 0.040 |
|
|
| (0.078) | |
| Fruits | 0.107 | 0.115 | 0.077 |
| (0.075) | (0.108) | (0.093) | |
| Vegetables | 0.014 | 0.008 | −0.005 |
| (0.061) | (0.091) | (0.070) | |
| Meat products |
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|
|
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| |
| Deep fried foods | −0.067 | −0.216 | 0.140 |
| (0.107) | (0.147) | (0.156) | |
| Confectionery |
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| |
| μ1 | −1.805 | −2.273 | −1.135 |
| μ2 | 1.033 | 0.946 | 1.142 |
| μ3 | 2.495 | 2.689 | 2.171 |
| Log-Likelihood (both stages) | − 5423.587 | − 2800.598 | − 2584.326 |
Standard errors are given in parentheses
aAge: 18–29 years old (reference category). Marital status: single (reference category)
Area of residence: town (reference category)
*p < 0.1. **p < 0.05. ***p < 0.01 (Statistically significant variables are highlighted in bold)
Marginal treatment effects of smoking on BMI (average effect of smoking participation on BMI category)
| BMI categories | Full sample | Males | Females |
|---|---|---|---|
| Underweight | − |
|
|
| [− 0.173, 0.000] | [−0.118, 0.000] | [−0.134, 0.000] | |
| Normal weight | − |
|
|
| [−0.273, 0.000] | [−0.278, 0.000] | [−0.196, 0.000] | |
| Overweight | 0.049 | 0.032 | 0.054 |
| [−0.121, 0.172] | [− 0.133, 0.185] | (−0.050, 0.112] | |
| Obese |
|
|
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| [0.000, 0.310] | [0.000, 0.308] | [0.000, 0.217] |
aConfidence intervals are reported in brackets
(Statistically significant estimates of smoking are highlighted in bold)