Abstract

BackgroundAssociations between education and obesity have been consistently reported among women in developed countries, but few studies have considered the influence of marital status and husbands’ education. This study aimed to examine differences in the association between education and overweight/obesity by marital status and to determine the contribution of husbands’ education to overweight/obesity among community-dwelling Japanese women.MethodsA questionnaire survey was conducted from 2010 to 2011 among residents aged 25–50 years in Japanese metropolitan areas. Of 2145 women who agreed to participate and completed the survey, 582 were unmarried and 1563 were married. Overweight/obesity was defined as body mass index ≥25 kg/m2. Multiple logistic regression analysis was conducted to determine whether women’s or their husbands’ education was associated with overweight/obesity after adjusting for age, work status, and equivalent income.ResultsThe prevalence of overweight/obesity was 11.9% among unmarried women and 10.3% among married women. Women’s own education was significantly associated with overweight/obesity among unmarried women but not among married women. The multivariate-adjusted odds ratio of high school education or lower compared with university education or higher was 3.21 (95% confidence interval: 1.59–6.51) among unmarried women. Among married women, husbands’ education was significantly associated with overweight/obesity: women whose husbands’ educational attainment was high school or lower had significantly higher odds of overweight/obesity than did those whose husbands had a university education or higher (1.67, 95% confidence interval: 1.10–2.55). Among married women whose educational attainment was college or higher, women whose husbands’ educational attainment was high school or lower had a significantly higher risk for overweight/obesity when compared with women whose husbands’ educational attainment was college or higher.ConclusionsAssociations between women’s own education and overweight/obesity varied by marital status, and husbands’ educational level was important for married women’s overweight/obesity. These findings indicate that the social influences bound to educational background affect women’s overweight/obesity.

Highlights

  • Associations between education and obesity have been consistently reported among women in developed countries, but few studies have considered the influence of marital status and husbands’ education

  • Unmarried women whose educational attainment was high school or lower had a significantly higher risk for overweight/ obesity when compared with unmarried women whose educational attainment was university or higher; the age-adjusted odds ratio (OR) was 3.08 (1.57–6.03), and the OR adjusted for age, work status, and equivalent income was 3.21 (1.59–6.51)

  • The present study explored the associations between education and overweight/obesity among unmarried and married women in Japan

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Summary

Introduction

Associations between education and obesity have been consistently reported among women in developed countries, but few studies have considered the influence of marital status and husbands’ education. This study aimed to examine differences in the association between education and overweight/obesity by marital status and to determine the contribution of husbands’ education to overweight/obesity among community-dwelling Japanese women. In developed countries where obesity has become an epidemic [1], women with low socioeconomic status, or with low education, are consistently found to have higher risks of obesity [2, 3]. Spousal concordance for obesity has been well documented [17], suggesting that the social influence of close members of women’s social networks (i.e., husbands among married women) may play a significant role in shaping their behavioral and health norms. It remains unclear to this point whether unmarried and married women exhibit different patterns in terms of educational inequalities in health-related behaviors, including obesity

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