Title: Incidence of Obesity among Hartford School Children
1Incidence of Obesity among Hartford School
Children
- 1Georgine Burke, PhD 2Rose Maljanian, RN, MBA
2Mark Sabo 3Pamela J. Clark, RN, MPH - 4Elizabeth Estrada, MD
- 1Child Health Data Center and 4Department of
Endocrinology, Connecticut Childrens Medical
Center - 2Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation,
Hartford Hospital - 3Hartford Public Schools
2Objectives
- To document prevalence of obesity among
school-based urban population and compare to
national reference group - To identify trends in body mass index in a
longitudinal sample - To provide information for Hartford Health
Partnership and the Diabetes Call to Action
3Background
- Increasing incidence of type 2 diabetes in
pediatric population - Need for city-wide data on obesity
- Hartford Health Partnership
- 3 hospitals, Hartford Health Department, Child
Health Data Center, Center for Outcomes Research
and Evaluation, school-based health clinics
4Method
- Eligibles students using school-based health
centers - e.g.., headache and other pain, respiratory
symptoms, pregnancy-related, minor injury - Cross sectional - 61 schools, 35 district
- Longitudinal samples - 35 schools, 12 district
5Data Sources
- School Health Assessment Record
- K, 6, 10th grades
- height, weight, age recorded at pediatric visit
- CDC Growth Charts, 2000
- Kuczmarski RJ, Ogden CL, Grummer-Strawn LM, et
al. CDC growth charts United States. Advance
data from vital and health statistics no. 314.
Hyattsville, MD National Center for Health
Statistics, 2000 (revised 6/8/2000)
6Definitions
- Overweight
- BMI 95th percentile for age and sex
- At risk of overweight -
- BMI 85th and
- Body Mass Index (BMI)
- (weight (kg)/stature (m)2)
- CDC Growth Charts, 2000
7Study Samples
8BMI Group by Grade
9BMI Distribution by Age and SexCompared to US
Reference Group5th to 95th tile
10At Risk for Overweight Grade at Evaluation by
Sex
BMI 85th and
11Overweight Grade at Evaluation by Sex
BMI 95th tile for age and sex
12At Risk of Overweight by Grade and Ethnicity
13Overweight by Grade and Ethnicity
14Prevalence of Overweight at Kindergarten
Comparison of Hartford Students to US Reference
Group (NHANES III)
Girls
Boys
Ogden CL, Troiano RP, Briefel RR, Kuczmarski RJ,
Flegal KM, Johnson, CL. Prevalence of overweight
among preschool children in the United States,
q971 through 1994. Pediatrics99, 1997.
15Hartford Public School Students (n866)BMI
Status at 6th grade by BMI Status at
Kindergarten Entry
CDC/NCHS, 2000
OR - at risk K to obese 6th 3.0 (1.9-4.8)
16Hartford Public School Students (n 118)BMI at
10th grade by BMI at 6th grade
CDC/NCHS, 2000
OR - at risk 6th to obese 10th 8.2 (2.2-31.6)
17Change in BMI tile Category with Grade
18Conclusions
- Hartford children are more obese than national
reference populations - But ethnic-specific references show no difference
- The greatest increase in obesity occurs between
Kindergarten and 6th grade
19Conclusions
- The NCHS/CDC at risk category does not
predicted only half of subsequent overweight in
this sample of low income, minority children and
youth - 49 of at risk in kindergarten became
overweight by 6th grade - 10 if 6th graders became overweight by 10th
grade - Among Hartford students, overweight does not vary
significantly (clinically or statistically) by
sex and ethnicity - Interventions to reduce overweight should focus
on elementary school population