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. 2015 Mar;39(3):535-41.
doi: 10.1038/ijo.2014.152. Epub 2014 Aug 4.

'Fish out of water': a cross-sectional study on the interaction between social and neighbourhood effects on weight management behaviours

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'Fish out of water': a cross-sectional study on the interaction between social and neighbourhood effects on weight management behaviours

M A Green et al. Int J Obes (Lond). 2015 Mar.

Abstract

Objective: To analyse whether an individual's neighbourhood influences the uptake of weight management strategies and whether there is an interaction between individual socio-economic status and neighbourhood deprivation.

Methodology: Data were collected from the Yorkshire Health Study (2010-2012) for 27 806 individuals on the use of the following weight management strategies: 'slimming clubs', 'healthy eating', 'increasing exercise' and 'controlling portion size'. A multi-level logistic regression was fit to analyse the use of these strategies, controlling for age, sex, body mass index, education, neighbourhood deprivation and neighbourhood population turnover (a proxy for neighbourhood social capital). A cross-level interaction term was included for education and neighbourhood deprivation. Lower Super Output Area was used as the geographical scale for the areal unit of analysis.

Results: Significant neighbourhood effects were observed for use of 'slimming clubs', 'healthy eating' and 'increasing exercise' as weight management strategies, independent of individual- and area-level covariates. A significant interaction between education and neighbourhood deprivation was observed across all strategies, suggesting that as an area becomes more deprived, individuals of the lowest education are more likely not to use any strategy compared with those of the highest education.

Conclusions: Neighbourhoods modify/amplify individual disadvantage and social inequalities, with individuals of low education disproportionally affected by deprivation. It is important to include neighbourhood-based explanations in the development of community-based policy interventions to help tackle obesity.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
The predicted probabilities of uptake of any weight management strategy by education group across the values of deprivation, accounting for modelled fixed and random effects.
Figure 2
Figure 2
The predicted probabilities of uptake of each weight management strategy by education group across the values of deprivation, accounting for modelled fixed and random effects: (a) slimming clubs, (b) healthy eating, (c) increasing exercise, (d) controlling portion size.

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