Affiliation:
1. Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences, Department of Bioinformatics and Biostatistics School of Public Health and Information Sciences Louisville Kentucky USA
2. National School of Anthropology and History Mexico City Mexico
3. Department of Kinesiology University of Texas Austin USA
4. Department of Health Management and Systems Sciences School of Public Health and Information Sciences, University of Louisville Louisville USA
Abstract
AbstractPurposeTo track body size and proportions, arm dimensions and grip strength in children, adolescents, and adults resident in an indigenous community in Oaxaca who were measured on two or three occasions across surveys in 1968, 1978, and 2000.MethodsThe three cross‐sectional surveys included measures of height, weight, sitting height, arm circumference, triceps skinfold, and grip strength in surveys of schoolchildren in 1968 and of schoolchildren, adolescents and adults in 1978 and 2000. Cross‐checks of surnames, forenames and ages/dates of birth of participants in the three surveys identified three samples of individuals measured on two occasions (1968–1978, two age groups in 1978–2000) and a subsample of individuals measured in the three surveys. Partial correlations controlling for age at each observation were calculated for each variable in the three sex‐specific samples measured on two occasions, and for the subsamples of males and females measured on three occasions.ResultsAllowing for variation in age among subsamples, inter‐age correlations were moderate to high for stature, moderate for sitting height and estimated leg length, and low to moderate for weight, BMI, arm and estimated arm muscle circumference, triceps skinfold, and grip strength.ConclusionAllowing for the relatively broad chronological age intervals, the inter‐age correlations for height, weight and BMI were at the low end, while those for grip strength and for strength per unit body weight for males (though not females) were generally in the range of correlations noted in studies of European samples. Likely associated with improved health, nutritional, and sanitation conditions, obesity and overweight were emerging among adults by 2000. Obesity and overweight in adults paralleled the introduction of mechanized agriculture that reduced routine physical work. Among children, the association of obesity and overweight is likely with increased nutritional availability, but poor choices in diet.
Funder
National Science Foundation