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https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.22995
Title: | Ethnicity, Neighborhood and Individual Socioeconomic Status, and Obesity: The Singapore Multiethnic Cohort | Authors: | Park, Su Hyun Nicolaou, Mary Dickens, Borame Sue Lee Yang, Qianyu Tan, Ken Wei van Dam, Rob M |
Keywords: | Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Endocrinology & Metabolism Nutrition & Dietetics BODY-MASS INDEX ASIAN POPULATIONS UNITED-STATES PREVALENCE WEIGHT ADULTS OVERWEIGHT/OBESITY ASSOCIATION CHILDHOOD IMAGE |
Issue Date: | 16-Oct-2020 | Publisher: | WILEY | Citation: | Park, Su Hyun, Nicolaou, Mary, Dickens, Borame Sue Lee, Yang, Qianyu, Tan, Ken Wei, van Dam, Rob M (2020-10-16). Ethnicity, Neighborhood and Individual Socioeconomic Status, and Obesity: The Singapore Multiethnic Cohort. OBESITY 28 (12) : 2405-2413. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1002/oby.22995 | Abstract: | Objective: It remains unclear whether ethnicity has an impact on obesity independent of socioeconomic status (SES) and environmental factors. Singapore provides a unique opportunity to address this issue because three major Asian ethnic groups are represented, and government policies prevent ethnic segregation. Therefore this study examined associations between ethnicity, SES, and obesity within neighborhoods in Singapore. Methods: Cross-sectional data from 29,819 participants of the Singapore Multiethnic Cohort who were aged 21 to 75 years and of Chinese, Malay, and Indian ethnicity were used. Obesity was defined using Asian criteria. Multilevel models used obesity as the dependent variable and age, marital status, ethnicity, education level, income, and neighborhood SES as independent variables. Results: Education level was more strongly inversely associated with obesity than income level or neighborhood SES. The association between ethnicity and obesity was not substantially explained by measures of individual and neighborhood SES. In females, the fully adjusted odds ratio of obesity was 5.01 for Malay ethnicity and 4.81 for Indian ethnicity as compared with Chinese ethnicity. In males, these odds ratios were 2.61 and 2.07, respectively. Conclusions: Ethnicity was strongly associated with obesity independent of SES and neighborhood environment. More research on sociocultural factors contributing to ethnic differences in obesity is warranted. | Source Title: | OBESITY | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/242880 | ISSN: | 1930-7381 1930-739X |
DOI: | 10.1002/oby.22995 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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