| Literature DB >> 31852706 |
Drew M Altschul1, Christina Wraw2, Catharine R Gale3, Ian J Deary4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: We investigated how youth cognitive and sociodemographic factors are associated with the aetiology of overweight and obesity. We examined both onset (who is at early risk for overweight and obesity) and development (who gains weight and when).Entities:
Keywords: cognition; longitudinal studies; obesity; overweight; socioeconomic factors
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31852706 PMCID: PMC6937025 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2019-033011
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Descriptive statistics for all tested variables
| Variable | NLSY—USA | NCDS—UK | ||||||
| N | Median | SD | N | Median | SD | |||
| Average age | Average age | |||||||
| BMI (kg/m²) | 24 | 6198 | 22.71 | 4.00 | 23 | 9835 | 22.13 | 3.09 |
| 33 | 4254 | 24.96 | 4.98 | 33 | 8741 | 24.62 | 4.57 | |
| 45 | 3651 | 26.62 | 5.53 | 42 | 8787 | 25.43 | 4.66 | |
| 53 | 3396 | 27.77 | 6.04 | 55 | 6861 | 26.79 | 5.49 | |
| Net family income (US$ or £) | 24 | 5386 | US$382 | US$365.17 | 23 | 10 027 | £87 | £52.25 |
| 33 | 3709 | US$769 | US$766.83 | 33 | 9094 | £272 | £178.64 | |
| 45 | 3593 | US$1288 | US$1624.87 | 42 | 9032 | £435 | £399.02 | |
| 53 | 3092 | US$1415 | US$2133.50 | 50 | 7846 | £600 | £554.46 | |
| Cognitive function | 7023 | 0.12 | 11 571 | 0.13 | ||||
| Youth SED | 7023 | 0.01 | 12 290 | 0.15 | ||||
| Education | 3788 | −0.03 | 8819 | −0.53 | ||||
| Sex | 3787 male | 3719 female | 5633 male | 5320 female | ||||
Cognitive function, youth SED and education are unitless variables, thus they are scaled so that their SD is 1. The means are 0, so the medians indicate theamount of skewness in the distributions.
BMI, body mass index; NCDS, National Child Development Study; NLSY, National Longitudinal Study of Youth 1979; SED, Socioeconomic Disadvantage.
Figure 1Path diagram of latent growth curve models used in primary analyses. Square boxes are observed variables, circles are latent variables. Single headed arrows are regressions or latent variable loadings, double headed arrows are covariances. BMI, body mass index; SED, socioeconomic disadvantage.
Coefficient estimates from models of BMI growth, cognitive function and sociodemographic variables
| Outcome | Predictor | USA | UK | ||||
| Estimate | 95% CI | P value | Estimate | 95% CI | P value | ||
| BMI level | Sex (women) | − |
|
| − |
|
|
| Cognitive function | 0.105 | (−0.221 to 0.431) | 0.683 | − |
|
| |
| Sex x cognitive function | − |
|
| −0.053 | (−0.222 to 0.116) | 0.694 | |
| Youth SED | 0.178 | (−0.047 to 0.403) | 0.348 |
|
|
| |
| Education | −0.248 | (−0.497 to 0.001) | 0.225 | − |
|
| |
| BMI slope | Sex (women) | 0.157 | (−0.230 to 0.544) | 0.670 | − |
|
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| Cognitive function | 0.092 | (−0.254 to 0.438) | 0.733 | 0.036 | (−0.110 to 0.182) | 0.694 | |
| Sex x cognitive function | 0.295 | (−0.087 to 0.677) | 0.348 | −0.140 | (−0.322 to 0.041) | 0.239 | |
| Youth SED | 0.281 | (0.045 to 0.518) | 0.108 | 0.028 | (−0.084 to 0.140) | 0.694 | |
| Education | −0.082 | (−0.332 to 0.168) | 0.683 | 0.030 | (−0.082 to 0.143) | 0.694 | |
| BMI level | −0.319 | (−0.810 to 0.171) | 0.443 |
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| |
| BMI quadratic | Sex (women) | 0.043 | (−0.085 to 0.172) | 0.683 |
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| Cognitive function | −0.003 | (−0.119 to 0.113) | 0.978 | −0.009 | (−0.054 to 0.037) | 0.742 | |
| Sex x cognitive function | −0.095 | (−0.222 to 0.032) | 0.348 | 0.026 | (−0.031 to 0.084) | 0.541 | |
| Youth SED | −0.038 | (−0.118 to 0.043) | 0.627 | 0.027 | (−0.009 to 0.062) | 0.242 | |
| Education | 0.020 | (−0.063 to 0.104) | 0.733 | −0.015 | (−0.051 to 0.021) | 0.563 | |
| BMI level | −0.002 | (−0.166 to 0.161) | 0.978 | −0.071 | (−0.139 to −0.003) | 0.083 | |
| BMI slope | −1.554 |
|
| − |
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| |
| χ2 | 83.966 | 137.465 | |||||
| df | 31 | 18 | |||||
| CFI | 0.992 | 0.991 | |||||
| SRMR | 0.015 | 0.011 | |||||
Models are latent growth curve models, with latent variables for BMI level, slope and quadratic slope—see the path diagram in figure 1. The same path diagram was used for both samples, except the US sample was modelled with adjustments for individual ages. All coeffecient values are multiple regression coefficients from the predictor onto the outcome, except the associations between the three BMI latent variables, which are covariances. Effect size estimates are for 1 SD changes in a variable. P values are corrected for multiple comparisons using the false discovery rate. Bolding indicates estimates with P values < 0.05.
BMI, body mass index; SED, socioeconomic disadvantage.
Figure 2Quadratic growth curves of BMI fitted to tertiles of cognitive function and across different sexes. The top panels illustrate BMI between sexes, the middle panels illustrate BMI in different general cognitive function (g) tertiles and the bottom panels illustrate the interaction between cognitive function tertiles and sex. Shaded areas represent the 95% error regions. BMI, body mass index.