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Obesity in the Transition to Adulthood <i>Predictions Across Race</i>/<i>Ethnicity</i>, <i>Immigrant Generation</i>, <i>and Sex</i>
Cited 75 time in
Web of Science
Cited 78 time in Scopus
- Authors
- Issue Date
- 2009-11
- Publisher
- AMER MEDICAL ASSOC
- Citation
- ARCHIVES OF PEDIATRICS & ADOLESCENT MEDICINE, Vol.163 No.11, pp.1022-1028
- Abstract
- Objective: To trace how racial/ethnic and immigrant disparities in body mass index (BMI) change over time as adolescents (age, 11-19 years) transition to young adulthood (age, 20-28 years). Design: We used growth curve modeling to estimate the pattern of change in BMI from adolescence through the transition to adulthood. Setting: All participants in the study were residents of the United States enrolled in junior high school or high school during the 1994-1995 school year. Participants: More than 20 000 adolescents from nationally representative data interviewed at wave I (1994-1995) and followed up in wave II (1996) and III (2001-2002) of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health when the sample was in early adulthood. Main Exposures: Race/ethnicity, immigrant generation, and sex. Outcome Measure: Body mass index. Results: Findings indicate significant differences in both the level and change in BMI across age by sex, race/ethnicity, and immigrant generation. Females, second- and third-generation immigrants, and Hispanic and black individuals experience more rapidly increasing BMIs from adolescence into young adulthood. Increases in BMI are relatively lower for males, first-generation immigrants, and white and Asian individuals. Conclusion: Disparities in BMI and prevalence of overweight and obesity widen with age as adolescents leave home and begin independent lives as young adults in their 20s.
- ISSN
- 1072-4710
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