20世纪中期冈比亚人口的营养状况和成人死亡率:不同类型的物质“资本”与死亡率有不同的关联吗?

IF 1 3区 历史学 Q3 FAMILY STUDIES History of the Family Pub Date : 2022-10-04 DOI:10.1080/1081602X.2022.2123842
R. Sear, A. Prentice, J. Wells
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引用次数: 1

摘要

营养状况的衡量标准通常被用作个人和人群健康的标志。营养状况的不同衡量标准——例如身高或体重——可能与健康结果有不同的关联,因为它们既反映了当前的营养状况,也反映了过去健康经验的积累,但不同衡量标准对过去和现在经验的加权不同。在这里,我们对1950年至1974年间在冈比亚四个村庄收集的纵向数据集进行了分析,以调查三种不同的指标——身高、体重指数(BMI)或血红蛋白水平——是否与成人死亡率有关。我们将这些不同的衡量标准解释为流动性不同的不同类型实物“资本”的指标。成人身高代表“非流动性”资本,表示过去不同发育时期的营养状况。BMI由过去的儿童经历和最近的营养和健康暴露决定,代表着中等“流动性”的资本。血红蛋白代表“流动”资本,主要由最近的环境暴露决定。不出所料,我们发现,更“流动性”的资本指标显示出与成人死亡率的更明确关联:对于血红蛋白,两性的死亡率风险都呈负相关:BMI也与男性和女性的死亡率风险普遍呈负相关,尽管超重者的死亡风险略有增加。对于男性来说,身高的“非流动性”测量与成年死亡率之间没有关系;但对于女性来说,这是一种U型关系,平均身高的女性死亡率最低。
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Nutritional status and adult mortality in a mid-20th century Gambian population: do different types of physical ‘capital’ have different associations with mortality?
ABSTRACT Measures of nutritional status are often used as markers of health, at both individual- and population-level. Different measures of nutritional status – such as height or weight, for example, – may have different associations with health outcomes because they reflect both current nutritional status and the accumulation of past health experiences, but the weighting of past and present experiences differs between different measures. Here, we present an analysis of a longitudinal dataset, collected between 1950 and 1974 in four Gambian villages, to investigate whether three different measures – height, body mass index (BMI) or haemoglobin level – are associated with adult mortality. We interpret these different measures as indicators of different types of physical ‘capital’ that vary in their liquidity. Adult height represents ‘illiquid’ capital, indicative of nutritional status in the past, during different periods of development. BMI, determined both by past childhood experiences and recent nutrition and health exposures, represents capital of intermediate ‘liquidity’. Haemoglobin represents ‘liquid’ capital, determined largely by recent environmental exposures. We find, not unexpectedly, that the more ‘liquid’ measures of capital show clearer associations with adult mortality: for haemoglobin there is a negative relationship with mortality risk for both sexes: BMI is also broadly negatively related to mortality risk for both men and women, though overweight individuals suffer a slightly increased risk of death. For men, there is no relationship between the ‘illiquid’ measure of height and adult mortality; but for women, there is a U-shaped relationship, with women of average height having the lowest mortality.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.10
自引率
10.00%
发文量
40
期刊介绍: The History of the Family: An International Quarterly makes a significant contribution by publishing works reflecting new developments in scholarship and by charting new directions in the historical study of the family. Further emphasizing the international developments in historical research on the family, the Quarterly encourages articles on comparative research across various cultures and societies in Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Pacific Rim, in addition to Europe, the United States and Canada, as well as work in the context of global history.
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