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Volume 31, Issue 4: August, 2004
Abstract
Sociodemographic, Behavioral, and Psychological Correlates
of Current Overweight and Obesity in Older, Urban African
American Women
Madhavi Reddy Patt, MD, MPH, Lisa R. Yanek, MPH, Taryn F.
Moy, MS, RD, Diane M. Becker, MPH, ScD
To better understand obesity and overweight among urban African
American women, the authors examined sociodemographic, behavioral,
and psychological factors within body mass index (BMI) categories.
A total of 496 women were recruited for cardiovascular risk
factor screening from 20 urban African American churches.
Study participants had a mean age of 52.8 years, 13.5 years
of education, and an average BMI of 32 kg/m2. Bivariate analyses
showed increased overall energy intake and decreased physical
performance on a walk test, and general well-being declined
as the BMI class increased; obese women had the lowest physical
performance and well-being levels and the highest energy intake
levels. There was no difference by BMI category, however,
in social variables such as educational attainment, employment,
marital status, or household income. This study suggests that
although women with increasing BMI have some physical and
well-being concerns, the major social variables are not differentially
distributed by BMI in this sample of women.
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