Children’s Nutrition Research Center Staff Publications
Language
English
Publication Date
9-1-2022
Journal
SSM - Population Health
DOI
10.1016/j.ssmph.2022.101200
PMID
36033349
PMCID
PMC9399523 D
PubMedCentral® Posted Date
8-10-2022
PubMedCentral® Full Text Version
Post-print
Abstract
Background: The social consequences of obesity may influence health and mortality rate (MR), given obesity's status as a highly stigmatized condition. Hence, a high absolute body mass index (BMI) in conjunction with the stigmatization of a high BMI may each independently increase the rate of MR.
Objectives: We tested whether relative BMI, defined as ordinal rank within a social reference group jointly defined by age, sex, and race/ethnicity, is associated with MR independent of absolute BMI.
Methods: Data were from three nationally representative datasets: the Health and Retirement Study (n = 31,115), the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS, n = 529,362), and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (n = 31,115). Relative BMI kg/m2 deciles were calculated within twenty-four subgroups jointly defined by age (6 levels), sex (2 levels), and race/ethnicity (4 levels). The association between ordinal rank BMI and MR was assessed using Cox survival generalized additive models in each dataset with adjustments for age, race, sex, smoking, educational attainment, and absolute BMI.
Results: Absolute BMI had a significant non-monotonic association with MR, such that BMI was positively associated with mortality at BMI levels above approximately 25 kg/m2. Contrary to expectations, results from NHIS indicated that individuals in the first decile of relative BMI had the highest MR whereas relative BMI was not associated with MR in the NHANES and HRS.
Conclusion: We hypothesized that the stigmatization of obesity might lead to an increased MR after controlling for absolute BMI. Contrary to expectations, a higher relative BMI was not associated with an increased MR independent of absolute BMI.
Keywords
Mortality rate, Longevity, Lifespan, Stigma, Epidemiology, Relative weight, Deviance, Obesity, BMI
Published Open-Access
yes
Recommended Citation
Pavela, Gregory; Yi, Nengjun; Mestre, Luis; et al., "The Associations Between Relative and Absolute Body Mass Index With Mortality Rate Based on Predictions From Stigma Theory" (2022). Children’s Nutrition Research Center Staff Publications. 203.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/staff_pub/203
Included in
Biochemical Phenomena, Metabolism, and Nutrition Commons, Dietetics and Clinical Nutrition Commons, Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism Commons, Nutrition Commons