Literature DB >> 31762424

Educational level and its relationship with body height and popliteal height in Chilean male workers.

Carlos Viviani1, Héctor Ignacio Castellucci2, Pedro Arezes3, Ángelo Bartsch2, Sara Bragança4, Johan F M Molenbroek5, Marta Martínez6, Verónica Aparici7.   

Abstract

A secular trend in body height has been experienced in many nations and populations, hypothesized to be the result of better living conditions. Educational level has been shown to be closely associated with body height. This study examined the changes in body height and popliteal height in a group of adult Chilean male workers by age cohort and the relationship of these with educational level. The body heights and popliteal heights of 1404 male workers from the Valparaíso and Metropolitan regions of Chile were measured in 2016. The sample was grouped by level of education (primary, secondary, technical and university) and age (21-30, 31-40 and 41-50 years). Robust ANOVA and post-hoc analyses using a one-step modified M-estimation of location were conducted based on bootstrap resampling. Both body height and popliteal height increased from the older to the younger age cohort. The largest increase was from the 41-50 to the 21-30 group, with a 1.1% increase in body height and 1.7% increase in popliteal height. When educational level was introduced into the analysis there was a marked increase in both body height and popliteal height for each cohort, but only in primary- and secondary-educated workers. Despite showing an overall increase in body height and popliteal height, younger workers with the highest levels of education showed fewer differences between them than did older workers with less education. The differences were larger in the older than in the younger cohorts. Similarly, this trend was less clear in workers with higher levels of education (technical and university), probably because of a dilution effect caused by increased access to higher education by workers in the lower income quintiles.

Keywords:  Anthropometry; Lower Leg; Secular trend

Year:  2019        PMID: 31762424     DOI: 10.1017/S0021932019000750

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biosoc Sci        ISSN: 0021-9320


  3 in total

1.  Growing taller unequally? Adult height and socioeconomic status in Spain (Cohorts 1940-1994).

Authors:  Begoña Candela-Martínez; Antonio D Cámara; Diana López-Falcón; José M Martínez-Carrión
Journal:  SSM Popul Health       Date:  2022-05-15

2.  Height of Male Prisoners in Santiago de Chile during the Nitrate Era: The Penalty of being Unskilled, Illiterate, Illegitimate and Mapuche.

Authors:  Manuel Llorca-Jaña; Javier Rivas; Damian Clarke; Diego Barría Traverso
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-08-28       Impact factor: 4.614

3.  Secular trends in Javanese adult height: the roles of environment and educational attainment.

Authors:  Annang Giri Moelyo; Mei Neni Sitaresmi; Madarina Julia
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2022-04-11       Impact factor: 3.295

  3 in total

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