Abstract

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/m2) 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.

Highlights

  • Recent evidence suggests a stabilizing trend in the prevalence of overweight and obesity in white and African American populations in the U.S, but a continued increasing prevalence in the Hispanic or Latino population [1]

  • We examined nativity and migration timing in relation to two different measurements of body size by considering body mass index (BMI), a general measure of body mass and obesity that does not capture body composition, as well as waist circumference, which provides an assessment of central fat deposition and central obesity [15,16,17,18]

  • We extended our analysis to compare the associations of migration timing with both overall body size and central body fat distribution, using several methods to understand the risk of obesity as well as the distribution of body size and composition associated with migration timing

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Recent evidence suggests a stabilizing trend in the prevalence of overweight and obesity in white and African American populations in the U.S, but a continued increasing prevalence in the Hispanic or Latino (hereafter Latino) population [1]. Foreign-born Latinos generally have smaller body mass index (BMI) and waist circumference and lower probability of overweight and obesity than. U.S.-born Latinos, but these differences tend to diminish over successive immigrant generations [2,3]. Within the first (foreign-born) generation, these measures of body size increase with. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 2436; doi:10.3390/ijerph17072436 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call