You are here: Home / Publications / Secular Change in the Association between Urbanisation and Abdominal Adiposity in China (1993-2011)

Secular Change in the Association between Urbanisation and Abdominal Adiposity in China (1993-2011)

Inoue, Yosuke; Howard, Annie Green; Thompson, Amanda L.; & Gordon-Larsen, Penny. (2018). Secular Change in the Association between Urbanisation and Abdominal Adiposity in China (1993-2011). Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 72(6), 484-90. PMCID: PMC5948158

Inoue, Yosuke; Howard, Annie Green; Thompson, Amanda L.; & Gordon-Larsen, Penny. (2018). Secular Change in the Association between Urbanisation and Abdominal Adiposity in China (1993-2011). Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 72(6), 484-90. PMCID: PMC5948158

Octet Stream icon 2632.ris — Octet Stream, 1 kB (1,874 bytes)

BACKGROUND: Little attention has been paid to how the association between urbanisation and abdominal adiposity changes over the course of economic development in low-income and middle-income countries.

METHODS: Data came from the China Health and Nutrition Survey waves 1993-2011 (seven waves). A mixed linear model was used to investigate the association between community-level urbanisation with waist-to-height ratio (WHtR; an indicator of abdominal adiposity). We incorporated interaction terms between urbanisation and study waves to understand how the association changed over time. The analyses were stratified by age (children vs adults).

RESULTS: Adult WHtR was positively associated with urbanisation in earlier waves but became inversely associated over time. More specifically, a 1 SD increase in the urbanisation index was associated with higher WHtR by 0.002 and 0.005 in waves 1993 and 1997, while it was associated with lower WHtR by 0.001 in 2011. Among child participants, the increase in WHtR over time was predominantly observed in more urbanised communities.

CONCLUSION: Our study suggests a shift in adult abdominal adiposity from more urbanised communities to less urbanised communities over a time of rapid economic development in China. Children living in more urbanised communities had higher increase in abdominal obesity with urbanisation over time relative to children living in less urbanised communities.




JOUR



Inoue, Yosuke
Howard, Annie Green
Thompson, Amanda L.
Gordon-Larsen, Penny



2018


Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health

72

6

484-90








PMC5948158


2632