Predictors of Overweight and Obesity in American Indian Families With Young Children

2019 
Abstract Objective To describe sociodemographic factors and health behaviors among American Indian (AI) families with young children and determine predictors of adult and child weight status among these factors. Design Descriptive, cross-sectional baseline data. Setting One urban area and 4 rural AI reservations nationwide. Participants A total of 450 AI families with children aged 2–5 years participating in the Healthy Children, Strong Families 2 intervention. Intervention Baseline data from a healthy lifestyles intervention. Main Outcome Measures Child body mass index (BMI) z-score and adult BMI, and multiple healthy lifestyle outcomes. Analysis Descriptive statistics and stepwise regression. Results Adult and child combined overweight and obesity rates were high: 82% and 40%, respectively. Food insecurity was high (61%). Multiple lifestyle behaviors, including fruit and vegetable and sugar-sweetened beverage consumption, adult physical activity, and child screen time, did not meet national recommendations. Adult sleep was adequate but children had low overnight sleep duration of 10 h/d. Significant predictors of child obesity included more adults in the household ( P = .003; β = 0.153), an adult AI caregiver ( P = .02; β = 0.116), high adult BMI ( P = .001; β = 0.176), gestational diabetes, high child birth weight ( P P = .04; β = 0.130). Conclusions and Implications We found multiple child-, adult-, and household-level factors influence early childhood obesity in AI children, highlighting the need for interventions to mitigate the modifiable factors identified in this study, including early life influences, home environments, and health behaviors.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    37
    References
    11
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []