Abstract

A cross-sectional survey was performed to examine to what degree differences in overweight and obesity between native Dutch and migrant primary school children could be explained by differences in physical activity, dietary intake, and sleep duration among these children. Subjects (n=1943) were primary school children around the age of 8–9 years old and their primary caregivers: native Dutch children (n=1546), Turkish children (n=93), Moroccan children (n=66), other non-western children (n=105), and other western children (n=133). Multivariate regressions and logistic regressions were used to examine the relationship between migrant status, child’s behavior, and BMI or prevalence of overweight, including obesity (logistic). Main explanatory variables were physical activity, dietary intake, and sleep duration. We controlled for age, sex, parental educational level, and parental BMI. Although sleep duration, dietary intake of fruit, and dietary intake of energy-dense snacks were associated with BMI, ethnic differences in sleep duration and dietary intake did not have a large impact on ethnic differences in overweight and obesity among children from migrant and native origin. It is suggested that future preventive strategies to reduce overweight and obesity, in general, consider the role of sleep duration. Also, cross-cultural variation in preparation of food among specific migrant groups, focusing on fat, sugar, and salt, deserves more attention. In order to examine which other variables may clarify ethnic differences in overweight and obesity, future research is needed.

Highlights

  • Overweight and obesity have become a major concern for public health [1]

  • We found that low sleep duration, low fruit intake, and high snack intake were associated with higher Body Mass Index (BMI) and higher prevalence of overweight and obesity

  • Sleep duration was associated with BMI and with overweight and obesity prevalence

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Summary

Introduction

Overweight and obesity have become a major concern for public health [1]. Overweight in childhood often develops into obesity in adulthood. When overweight parents are nurturing children of their own, these children have a higher chance of developing overweight or obesity themselves, as parental Body Mass Index (BMI) is a predictor of their child’s BMI [3]. Due to the growing prevalence of childhood overweight and obesity, worldwide, and due to the fact that obesity is the fifth leading risk for global deaths, the World Health Organization (WHO) has recognized childhood obesity as one of the most serious challenges in public health of the 21st century [4]. Besides the long-lasting adverse physical, psychological, and social health consequences, childhood obesity is responsible for a substantial economic burden [5,6]

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