4.7 Article

The female-male disparity in obesity prevalence among black American young adults: contributions of sociodemographic characteristics of the childhood family

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NUTRITION
Volume 89, Issue 4, Pages 1204-1212

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.3945/ajcn.2007.25751

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [P01-HD31921]
  2. Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholars Program, NIH (NCI) [T32-CA09330]
  3. Center for Human Science (Chapel Hill, NC)
  4. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
  5. NIH (NICHD) [R01-HD057194, R01 HD041375, K01 HD044263]
  6. NIH (NCMHHD) [P60-MD000239, P60-MD000244]

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Background: In the United States, black women are at much greater risk of obesity than are black men. Little is known about the factors underlying this disparity. Objective: We explored whether childhood sociodemographic factors (parental education, single-mother household, number of siblings, number of minors in household, birth order, and female caregiver's age) were associated with the gender disparity in obesity prevalence in young black adults in the United States. Design: An analytic data set (n = 7747) was constructed from the nationally representative National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health. Childhood sociodemographic factors were assessed in 1994 1995 in nonimmigrant black and white youths aged 11-19 y. Obesity was assessed in 2001-2002. For each childhood sociodemographic factor, we evaluated whether the prevalence difference (female obesity minus male obesity) was modified by the factor. We described the contribution of each variable category to the overall prevalence difference. Results: In unadjusted and multivariable-adjusted models, parental education consistently modified gender disparity in blacks (P = 0.01). The gender gap was largest with low parental education (16.7% of men compared with 45.4% of women were obese) and smallest with high parental education (28.5% of men compared with 31.4% of women were obese). In whites, there was little overall gender difference in obesity prevalence. Conclusions: To our knowledge, this was the first study to document that the gender disparity in obesity prevalence in young black adults is concentrated in families with low parental education. In these lowsocioeconomic-status families, obesity development is either under the control of distinct mechanisms in each gender, or men and women from these households adopt different obesity-related behaviors. Am J Clin Nutr 2009; 89: 1204-12.

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