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A quantitative synthesis study on body mass index and associated factors among adult men and women in Switzerland

[journal article]

Matthes, Katarina L.
Hartmann, Christina
Siegrist, Michael
Burnier, Michel
Bochud, Murielle
Zwahlen, Marcel
Bender, Nicole
Staub, Kaspar

Abstract

Excess weight is caused by multiple factors and has increased sharply in Switzerland since the 1990s. Its consequences represent a major challenge for Switzerland, both in terms of health and the economy. Until now, there has been no cross-dataset overview study on excess weight in adults in Switzer... view more

Excess weight is caused by multiple factors and has increased sharply in Switzerland since the 1990s. Its consequences represent a major challenge for Switzerland, both in terms of health and the economy. Until now, there has been no cross-dataset overview study on excess weight in adults in Switzerland. Therefore, our aim was to conduct the first synthesis on excess weight in Switzerland. We included all existing nationwide Swiss studies (eight total), which included information on body mass index (BMI). Mixed multinomial logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the associations between different socio-demographic, lifestyle cofactors and the World Health Organization (WHO) categories for BMI. Along with lifestyle factors, socio-demographic factors were among the strongest determinants of BMI. In addition, self-rated health status was significantly lower for underweight, pre-obese and obese men and women than for normal weight persons. The present study is the first to synthesise all nationwide evidence on the importance of several socio-demographic and lifestyle factors as risk factors for excess weight. In particular, the highlighted importance of lifestyle factors for excess weight opens up the opportunity for further public health interventions.... view less

Keywords
overweight; adipositas; life style; Switzerland; adult; social factors; demographic factors; health status

Classification
Medical Sociology

Free Keywords
body mass index; lifestyle factors; obesity; synthesis study; EU-SILC 2010

Document language
English

Publication Year
2022

Page/Pages
p. 1-10

Journal
Journal of Nutritional Science, 11 (2022)

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/jns.2022.66

ISSN
2048-6790

Status
Published Version; peer reviewed

Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution 4.0


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Based on DSpace, Copyright (c) 2002-2022, DuraSpace. All rights reserved.