4.6 Article

Obesity and US Mortality Risk Over the Adult Life Course

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 177, Issue 5, Pages 431-442

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kws325

Keywords

cohort; life course; mortality; obesity; United States

Funding

  1. Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health and Society Scholars Program

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In this study, we analyzed age variation in the association between obesity status and US adult mortality risk. Previous studies have found that the association between obesity and mortality risk weakens with age. We argue that existing results were derived from biased estimates of the obesity-mortality relationship because models failed to account for confounding influences from respondents' ages at survey and/or cohort membership. We employed a series of Cox regression models in data from 19 cross-sectional, nationally representative waves of the US National Health Interview Survey (1986-2004), linked to the National Death Index through 2006, to examine age patterns in the obesity-mortality association between ages 25 and 100 years. Findings suggest that survey-based estimates of age patterns in the obesity-mortality relationship are significantly confounded by disparate cohort mortality and age-related survey selection bias. When these factors are accounted for in Cox survival models, the obesity-mortality relationship is estimated to grow stronger with age.

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