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This version published online on February 22, 2005
Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, doi:10.1210/jc.2004-2208
A more recent version of this article appeared on May 1, 2005
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Medline Plus Health Information
*Nutrition
*Obesity
*Obesity in Children

Submitted on November 10, 2004
Accepted on February 10, 2005

ONSET OF OVERWEIGHT DURING CHILDHOOD AND ADOLESCENCE IN RELATION TO RACE AND SEX

Chandan Saha Ph.D.*, George J. Eckert M.A.S., J. Howard Pratt M.D., and R. Ravi Shankar M.D.

Departments of Medicine (C.S., G.J.E., J.H.P.) and Pediatrics (RRS), Indiana University Purdue University at Indianapolis, and the Richard L. Roudebush V.A. Medical Center (J.H.P.), Indianapolis, IN, 46202

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: cksaha{at}iupui.edu.

Overweight [body mass index (BMI) percentile ≥ 95th] in children has become a major public health problem. The age when overweight begins and how it progresses are mostly unknown. Such information would be important for the optimal timing of prevention. We conducted a survival analysis on time to overweight and compared survival curves by race and sex. Data from a cohort of 924 children recruited from schools in Indianapolis, IN were analyzed. Blacks were at greater risk for becoming overweight than whites. Similar findings were obtained when at risk of overweight (BMI percentile ≥ 85th and < 95th) and overweight were considered as a single category. Twenty five percent of blacks were overweight or at risk of overweight at or before age 7, whereas it was age 11 in white females and age 10 in white males when 25% became overweight or were at risk of becoming overweight. The overall overweight-free survival curve for black females was significantly different from those for white females (P < 0.001), and black males were significantly different from white males (P = 0.04). There was no sex difference. The time to overweight during childhood and adolescence varies by race indicating the need for race-specific timing of interventions.


Key words: Obesity • Survival curves • Double censoring • At risk of overweight


Find additional patient-related information at:

Weight Problems for Black and White Children
Shaping America\'s Health--Association for Weight Management and Obesity Prevention


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