학술논문

Nativity, Neighborhoods, and Body Composition in the Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging
Document Type
article
Source
The Gerontologist. 60(2)
Subject
Prevention
Basic Behavioral and Social Science
Nutrition
Behavioral and Social Science
Aging
Obesity
Aged
Aged
80 and over
Body Composition
Body Mass Index
California
Emigrants and Immigrants
Female
Hispanic or Latino
Humans
Linear Models
Male
Mexican Americans
Mexico
Middle Aged
Prospective Studies
Residence Characteristics
Waist Circumference
Weight
BMI
Latinos/Hispanic
Clinical Sciences
Gerontology
Language
Abstract
Background and objectivesGlobally, obesity influences the risk of many major chronic diseases. Our study examines the association between individual nativity and neighborhood level concentration of immigrants with 10-year changes in weight, body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference (WC) among older Latinos.Research design and methodsThe Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging (SALSA) is a population-based prospective study of community-dwelling older adults of Mexican origin (baseline ages 58-101 years). The primary outcome was repeated measures of weight over a 10-year period for 1,628 respondents. Nativity was defined by participants' reported place of birth (US-born or Latin American foreign born). Neighborhood immigrant concentration was measured as the percentage of foreign born at census tract level (2000 US Census). We used linear mixed models with repeated measures of weight, height, BMI, and WC as dependent variables (level 1), clustered within individuals (level 2) and neighborhood migrant concentration (level 3).ResultsForeign born (FB) respondents had lower baseline weight than the US-born (mean, 160 vs. 171 lbs, p < .0001). Over time, weight differences between the FB and the US-born decreased by 1.7 lbs/5 years as US-born weight decreased more rapidly. We observed a significant interaction between individual nativity and neighborhood immigrant concentration (p = .012). We found similar patterns for BMI, but did not find statistically significant differences in WC trajectories.Discussion and implicationsOur study observed significant differences by foreign born vs. US nativity in baseline weight/BMI and in their trajectories over time. Additionally, we found weight/BMI differences in neighborhood immigrant concentration for the FB, but not for the US-born.