You are here: Home / Publications / Ethnic Differences in Body Mass Index and Prevalence of Obesity in School Children of Urumqi City, Xinjiang, China

Ethnic Differences in Body Mass Index and Prevalence of Obesity in School Children of Urumqi City, Xinjiang, China

Li Yan, Wei; Jian Zheng, Yu-Jian; Jun, Wu; Feng Chen, Shu; Ti, Xiao-Kai; Ling, Li; & Liu, Xiao-Rui. (2006). Ethnic Differences in Body Mass Index and Prevalence of Obesity in School Children of Urumqi City, Xinjiang, China. Biomedical and Environmental Sciences, 19(006), 469-473.

Li Yan, Wei; Jian Zheng, Yu-Jian; Jun, Wu; Feng Chen, Shu; Ti, Xiao-Kai; Ling, Li; & Liu, Xiao-Rui. (2006). Ethnic Differences in Body Mass Index and Prevalence of Obesity in School Children of Urumqi City, Xinjiang, China. Biomedical and Environmental Sciences, 19(006), 469-473.

Octet Stream icon 570.ris — Octet Stream, 2 kB (2,088 bytes)

Objective
To investigate the prevalence of obesity and distribution of body mass index (BMI) in school children of four ethnic groups in Urumqi, Xinjiang, China.

Methods
A total of 55 508 school children of Han, Hui, Uygur and Kazak nationalities aged 8-18 years were selected by a cluster sampling from a districts of Urumqi City for anthropometric measurement and demographic survey. Prevalence of obesity and overweight and distribution of body mass index (BMI) by gender, age, and nationality were analyzed and compared. Cutoff points of BMI for defining obesity and overweight were based on the proposal set by the Working Group on Obesity in China (WGOC) to assess age-, gender- and nationality-specific prevalence of obesity and overweight.

Results
Prevalence of obesity was 5.34%, 6.78%, 3.39 %, and 1.22% for boys and 2.61%, 1.83%, 1.78%, and 1.40% for girls of Han, Hui, Uygur and Kazak nationalities, respectively. Prevalence of obesity tended to decrease with age overall, whereas that of overweight increased with age in Han children.

Conclusions
Prevalence of obesity in school children in Urumqi varies with their nationalities and is lower than that of an average national level and a level of western countries. Obesity is more prevalent in boys than in girls of Urmuqi overall, which is just the opposite in Kazak children. Han boys and Hui girls have the highest prevalence of obesity and Kazak boys and girls have the lowest ones. Prevalence of obesity decreases with age, but that of overweight shows a different trend.




JOUR



Li Yan, Wei
Jian Zheng, Yu-Jian
Jun, Wu
Feng Chen, Shu
Ti, Xiao-Kai
Ling, Li
Liu, Xiao-Rui



2006


Biomedical and Environmental Sciences

19

006

469-473










570