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Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data

INTRODUCTION: Lifestyle changes including COVID-19 lockdown cause weight gain and may change obesity trends; however, timely changes are largely unknown and monitoring measures are usually lack. This first large-scale study aimed to analyze the real-world national trends of obesity prevalence of Chi...

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Autores principales: Yang, Yan, Zhang, Miao, Yu, Jian, Pei, Zhou, Sun, Chengjun, He, Jingwei, Qian, Tian, Luo, Feihong, Zhang, Shaoyan, Xu, Zhenran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9204322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35721754
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.859245
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author Yang, Yan
Zhang, Miao
Yu, Jian
Pei, Zhou
Sun, Chengjun
He, Jingwei
Qian, Tian
Luo, Feihong
Zhang, Shaoyan
Xu, Zhenran
author_facet Yang, Yan
Zhang, Miao
Yu, Jian
Pei, Zhou
Sun, Chengjun
He, Jingwei
Qian, Tian
Luo, Feihong
Zhang, Shaoyan
Xu, Zhenran
author_sort Yang, Yan
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Lifestyle changes including COVID-19 lockdown cause weight gain and may change obesity trends; however, timely changes are largely unknown and monitoring measures are usually lack. This first large-scale study aimed to analyze the real-world national trends of obesity prevalence of Chinese children in the past five years, and the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on pediatric obesity development through both mobile- and hospital-based data. METHODS: This study included children aged 3 to 19 years old all over China from January 2017 to April 2021. Hospital-measured and parent-reported cases from XIGAO database were analyzed. Body mass index (BMI) z-score calculation and obesity status evaluation were made according to Chinese standards. We evaluated obesity/overweight prevalence over the past five years and the changes of BMI z-score during COVID-19 lockdown. RESULTS: A total of 656396 children from 31 provinces were involved, including 447481 hospital-measured cases and 208915 parent-reported cases. The obesity and overweight prevalence were 8.05% (95%CI 7.76%–8.39%) and 10.06% (95%CI 10.79%–11.55%), comparable to those of China National Nutrition Surveys during 2015–2019. Northern China had the highest obesity prevalence. Parent-reported data had higher obesity/overweight prevalence than hospital-measured data (18.3% [95%CI 17.7%–18.9%] vs. 21.7% [95%CI 20.7%–23.0%]). The trend of obesity prevalence remained stable with slight decrease, but COVID-19 lockdown caused a significant increase of 1.86% in 2020. Both mobile- and hospital-based data showed weight gain in the first half of 2020. High BMI z-score increase were found among primary and junior middle school children, and children in northeast area during lockdown. CONCLUSION: Weight gain during COVID-19 among Chinese children had regional differences and mainly affect primary and junior middle school children, thus warrants targeted interventions. The mobile growth assessment based on parent-reported data was a feasible, efficient and timely way for obesity monitoring among Chinese children, especially during epidemic.
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spelling pubmed-92043222022-06-18 Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data Yang, Yan Zhang, Miao Yu, Jian Pei, Zhou Sun, Chengjun He, Jingwei Qian, Tian Luo, Feihong Zhang, Shaoyan Xu, Zhenran Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) Endocrinology INTRODUCTION: Lifestyle changes including COVID-19 lockdown cause weight gain and may change obesity trends; however, timely changes are largely unknown and monitoring measures are usually lack. This first large-scale study aimed to analyze the real-world national trends of obesity prevalence of Chinese children in the past five years, and the impact of COVID-19 pandemic on pediatric obesity development through both mobile- and hospital-based data. METHODS: This study included children aged 3 to 19 years old all over China from January 2017 to April 2021. Hospital-measured and parent-reported cases from XIGAO database were analyzed. Body mass index (BMI) z-score calculation and obesity status evaluation were made according to Chinese standards. We evaluated obesity/overweight prevalence over the past five years and the changes of BMI z-score during COVID-19 lockdown. RESULTS: A total of 656396 children from 31 provinces were involved, including 447481 hospital-measured cases and 208915 parent-reported cases. The obesity and overweight prevalence were 8.05% (95%CI 7.76%–8.39%) and 10.06% (95%CI 10.79%–11.55%), comparable to those of China National Nutrition Surveys during 2015–2019. Northern China had the highest obesity prevalence. Parent-reported data had higher obesity/overweight prevalence than hospital-measured data (18.3% [95%CI 17.7%–18.9%] vs. 21.7% [95%CI 20.7%–23.0%]). The trend of obesity prevalence remained stable with slight decrease, but COVID-19 lockdown caused a significant increase of 1.86% in 2020. Both mobile- and hospital-based data showed weight gain in the first half of 2020. High BMI z-score increase were found among primary and junior middle school children, and children in northeast area during lockdown. CONCLUSION: Weight gain during COVID-19 among Chinese children had regional differences and mainly affect primary and junior middle school children, thus warrants targeted interventions. The mobile growth assessment based on parent-reported data was a feasible, efficient and timely way for obesity monitoring among Chinese children, especially during epidemic. Frontiers Media S.A. 2022-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC9204322/ /pubmed/35721754 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.859245 Text en Copyright © 2022 Yang, Zhang, Yu, Pei, Sun, He, Qian, Luo, Zhang and Xu https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Endocrinology
Yang, Yan
Zhang, Miao
Yu, Jian
Pei, Zhou
Sun, Chengjun
He, Jingwei
Qian, Tian
Luo, Feihong
Zhang, Shaoyan
Xu, Zhenran
Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title_full Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title_fullStr Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title_full_unstemmed Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title_short Nationwide Trends of Pediatric Obesity and BMI z-Score From 2017-2021 in China: Comparable Findings From Real-World Mobile- and Hospital-Based Data
title_sort nationwide trends of pediatric obesity and bmi z-score from 2017-2021 in china: comparable findings from real-world mobile- and hospital-based data
topic Endocrinology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9204322/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35721754
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2022.859245
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