首页> 美国卫生研究院文献>International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health >Associations of Nativity Age at Migration and Percent of Life in the U.S. with Midlife Body Mass Index and Waist Size in New York City Latinas
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Associations of Nativity Age at Migration and Percent of Life in the U.S. with Midlife Body Mass Index and Waist Size in New York City Latinas

机译:美国耶稣诞生移民年龄和生活百分比与纽约拉丁裔中年人的身体质量指数和腰围的关系

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摘要

Migration to the U.S. has been associated with increased body size and obesity risk in Latinas, but results for Caribbean immigrant women are limited and inconclusive. Emerging evidence also suggests that early-life environment associations with women’s midlife body mass index (BMI) may be different for larger and smaller women, but this has not been tested within migration life-course history. We examined the associations of nativity and migration timing with midlife body size in a sample of majority Caribbean Latinas and whether these associations varied across the body size distribution. We used interview data from 787 self-identified Latinas (ages 40–65 years) and assessed overall obesity using BMI (kg/m ) and central obesity based on waist circumference (WC, cm). We used linear and quantile regression to examine the association of migration history with BMI and WC and logistic regression for the probability of obesity. Foreign birthplace, later migration age, and lower percent of life in the U.S. were associated with lower BMI and WC means and lower odds of overall and central obesity. Quantile regression showed only inverse associations in the upper quantiles of BMI and WC. For example, relative to U.S.-born women, women living <50% of their lives in the U.S. had lower BMI in the 75th BMI percentile (β = −4.10, 95% CI: −6.75, −0.81), with minimal differences in the 25th (β = 0.04, 95% CI: −1.01, 0.96) and 50th BMI percentiles (β = −1.54, 95% CI: −2.90, 0.30). Our results support that migration to and increasing time in the U.S. are associated with greater body size in midlife Latina women, with stronger influences at higher body size distribution.
机译:移民到美国与拉美裔人的身材增加和肥胖风险增加有关,但加勒比移民妇女的研究成果有限且尚无定论。越来越多的证据还表明,年龄较大的女性和较小的女性,其早期生活环境与女性中年体重指数(BMI)的关联可能有所不同,但这尚未在移徙生命历程中得到检验。我们在大多数加勒比拉丁裔样本中检查了出生率和迁徙时间与中年年龄的关联,以及这些关联是否在整个身体尺寸分布中有所不同。我们使用了来自787名自我识别的拉丁裔(40-65岁)的访谈数据,并使用BMI(kg / m 2)和基于腰围(WC,cm)的中枢肥胖来评估整体肥胖。我们使用线性和分位数回归研究了肥胖史与BMI和WC的迁徙史之间的关联以及Logistic回归。外国出生地,较晚的移民年龄和美国较低的生活百分比与较低的BMI和WC平均值以及较低的总体和中枢性肥胖几率相关。分位数回归仅显示BMI和WC的较高分位数成反比。例如,相对于美国出生的妇女,在美国生活时间少于50%的妇女的BMI在第75个BMI百分位数中较低(β= -4.10,95%CI:-6.75,-0.81),差异最小。第25位(β= 0.04,95%CI:-1.01,0.96)和第50位BMI百分位数(β= -1.54,95%CI:-2.90,0.30)。我们的研究结果支持移民到美国并增加时间与中年拉丁裔女性的体型更大有关,在更大的体型分布上影响更大。

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