Introduction
Although socioeconomic differences in prevalence of
obesity are well documented, whether patterns of weight gain during key periods
of growth and development differ among youth from different socioeconomic
backgrounds is unknown. This study examines socioeconomic disparities in
overweight status and 5-year weight gain among adolescents.
Methods
Project EAT (Eating Among Teens)-II followed a
socioeconomically and ethnically diverse sample of 2,516 adolescents from 1999
through 2004. Mixed-model regression analyses examined longitudinal trends in
overweight status as a function of socioeconomic status (SES).
Results
Girls and boys in the low-SES category were more likely to
be overweight than were those in the high-SES category. Boys in the high-SES
category showed a significant decrease ( P = .006) in overweight
prevalence between 1999 and 2004, whereas boys in the low- and middle-SES
categories showed no significant change. Girls in the low-SES category showed a
significant 5-year increase ( P = .004) in overweight prevalence compared
with a stable prevalence of overweight among girls in the middle- and high-SES
categories.
Conclusions
Our data show continued and, in some cases, increasing
socioeconomic disparities in risk for overweight. Youth from low-SES backgrounds
are at increased risk for overweight and are more likely to remain overweight
(boys) or become overweight (girls). Designing obesity prevention and treatment
interventions that reach and address the unique needs of youth and families from
less-advantaged socioeconomic backgrounds is a public health priority.