Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor

Abstract Background To examine predictors of increasing overweight among children in two developing countries. Methods Primary school children (6–10 y at baseline, n = 336) and their caregivers. Longitudinal data were collected in 2012, with follow-up 18 months later. Data on children’s height, weight and dietary intake were collected within 8 primary public schools in Trinidad and 7 schools in St. Kitts. Caregivers’ demographic and anthropometric data were also collected. Results At baseline, children’s age and sex and caregivers’ BMI, age, and marital status and reported dietary intake were similar across all weight groups. The incidence of overweight and obesity among children was 8.8% and 8.1%, respectively. Dietary intake at baseline was not related to becoming overweight or obese. Similarly there were no differences in reported intake among children who became overweight or obese except that they consumed fewer fruits (0.54±0.92 vs. 0.98±1.66, p = 0.017). Misreporting of energy intake was higher among overweight/obese children as compared to those who were not overweight/obese (27% vs. 17%, p = 0.047). The baseline predictors of increasing BMI (adjusted) of the children were older age, higher baseline BMI z-score and higher height-for-age (HFA) z-score; caregiver BMI, children’s energy intake (with adjustment for misreporting) did not predict changes in children’s BMI. Conclusions The increasing prevalence of overweight/obesity among children is a serious problem in the Caribbean. Heavier children are at elevated risk of continued rapid increase in their weight status, pointing to the need for early intervention.

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Main Authors: Mumena, Walaa A, Francis-Granderson, Isabella, Phillip, Leroy E, Gray-Donald, Katherine
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 2018-01-30
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40608-018-0182-8
http://hdl.handle.net/2139/45193
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spelling oai:oai:uwispace.sta.uwi.edu:2139:2139-451932018-02-05T04:13:15Z Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor Mumena, Walaa A Francis-Granderson, Isabella Phillip, Leroy E Gray-Donald, Katherine Abstract Background To examine predictors of increasing overweight among children in two developing countries. Methods Primary school children (6–10 y at baseline, n = 336) and their caregivers. Longitudinal data were collected in 2012, with follow-up 18 months later. Data on children’s height, weight and dietary intake were collected within 8 primary public schools in Trinidad and 7 schools in St. Kitts. Caregivers’ demographic and anthropometric data were also collected. Results At baseline, children’s age and sex and caregivers’ BMI, age, and marital status and reported dietary intake were similar across all weight groups. The incidence of overweight and obesity among children was 8.8% and 8.1%, respectively. Dietary intake at baseline was not related to becoming overweight or obese. Similarly there were no differences in reported intake among children who became overweight or obese except that they consumed fewer fruits (0.54±0.92 vs. 0.98±1.66, p = 0.017). Misreporting of energy intake was higher among overweight/obese children as compared to those who were not overweight/obese (27% vs. 17%, p = 0.047). The baseline predictors of increasing BMI (adjusted) of the children were older age, higher baseline BMI z-score and higher height-for-age (HFA) z-score; caregiver BMI, children’s energy intake (with adjustment for misreporting) did not predict changes in children’s BMI. Conclusions The increasing prevalence of overweight/obesity among children is a serious problem in the Caribbean. Heavier children are at elevated risk of continued rapid increase in their weight status, pointing to the need for early intervention. 2018-02-04T04:19:39Z 2018-02-04T04:19:39Z 2018-01-30 2018-02-04T04:19:40Z Journal Article BMC Obesity. 2018 Jan 30;5(1):4 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40608-018-0182-8 http://hdl.handle.net/2139/45193 en The Author(s). application/pdf
institution UWI TT
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country Trinidad y Tobago
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databasecode dig-uwi-tt
tag biblioteca
region Caribe
libraryname UWI library system TT
language English
description Abstract Background To examine predictors of increasing overweight among children in two developing countries. Methods Primary school children (6–10 y at baseline, n = 336) and their caregivers. Longitudinal data were collected in 2012, with follow-up 18 months later. Data on children’s height, weight and dietary intake were collected within 8 primary public schools in Trinidad and 7 schools in St. Kitts. Caregivers’ demographic and anthropometric data were also collected. Results At baseline, children’s age and sex and caregivers’ BMI, age, and marital status and reported dietary intake were similar across all weight groups. The incidence of overweight and obesity among children was 8.8% and 8.1%, respectively. Dietary intake at baseline was not related to becoming overweight or obese. Similarly there were no differences in reported intake among children who became overweight or obese except that they consumed fewer fruits (0.54±0.92 vs. 0.98±1.66, p = 0.017). Misreporting of energy intake was higher among overweight/obese children as compared to those who were not overweight/obese (27% vs. 17%, p = 0.047). The baseline predictors of increasing BMI (adjusted) of the children were older age, higher baseline BMI z-score and higher height-for-age (HFA) z-score; caregiver BMI, children’s energy intake (with adjustment for misreporting) did not predict changes in children’s BMI. Conclusions The increasing prevalence of overweight/obesity among children is a serious problem in the Caribbean. Heavier children are at elevated risk of continued rapid increase in their weight status, pointing to the need for early intervention.
format Journal Article
author Mumena, Walaa A
Francis-Granderson, Isabella
Phillip, Leroy E
Gray-Donald, Katherine
spellingShingle Mumena, Walaa A
Francis-Granderson, Isabella
Phillip, Leroy E
Gray-Donald, Katherine
Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
author_facet Mumena, Walaa A
Francis-Granderson, Isabella
Phillip, Leroy E
Gray-Donald, Katherine
author_sort Mumena, Walaa A
title Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
title_short Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
title_full Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
title_fullStr Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
title_full_unstemmed Rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the Caribbean; high initial BMI is the most significant predictor
title_sort rapid increase of overweight and obesity among primary school-aged children in the caribbean; high initial bmi is the most significant predictor
publishDate 2018-01-30
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40608-018-0182-8
http://hdl.handle.net/2139/45193
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