Disparities in body mass index trajectories from adolescence to early adulthood for sexual minority women

Citation

Wood, Sarah M.; Schott, Whitney; Marshal, Michael P.; & Akers, Aletha Y. (2017). Disparities in body mass index trajectories from adolescence to early adulthood for sexual minority women. Journal of Adolescent Health. vol. 61 (6) pp. 722-728

Abstract

Purpose: We aimed to estimate group-based trajectories of body mass index (BMI) in a longitudinal cohort of young women and determine the association between sexual identity and BMI trajectory group, adjusting for obesity risk factors. Methods: We analyzed data from females in waves I-IV of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health. Sexual identity was categorized as heterosexual, mostly heterosexual, bisexual, or lesbian (homosexual/mostly homosexual). We conducted group-based trajectory modeling of BMI with a censored normal distribution and a cubic relationship with age to identify three BMI trajectory groups. Multinomial logit regressions predicted the risk of trajectory membership associated with sexual identity, adjusting for background characteristics. Results: At wave I, the mean (n = 7,801) age was 15.9 years (95% confidence interval: 15.6-16.1). Subjects were 16.3% African-American; and 80.0% heterosexual, 15.9% mostly heterosexual, 2.5% bisexual, and 1.7% lesbian. Group-based trajectory modeling identified three BMI trajectory groups characterized as (1) minimal obesity (62.2%), (2) developing obesity (29.9%), and (3) progressive obesity (8.0%). In multinomial logit regressions adjusted for age, race, parental obesity and education, sexual abuse, household income, screen time, depressive symptoms, and rural residence, lesbian women had a nearly two-fold higher relative risk of being in the developing obesity trajectory group (relative risk ratio = 1.91, 95% confidence interval: 1.10-3.32) relative to the minimal obesity group, compared with heterosexual women. Conclusions: Lesbian women were at increased risk of membership in the developing obesity trajectory group compared with heterosexual women. Adjusting for obesity risk factors had minimal impact on the point estimates for this association. (C) 2017 Society for Adolescent Health and Medicine. All rights reserved.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.jadohealth.2017.06.008

Keyword(s)

Adolescents

Notes

Wood, Sarah M. Schott, Whitney Marshal, Michael P. Akers, Aletha Y. 1879-1972

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Journal of Adolescent Health

Author(s)

Wood, Sarah M.
Schott, Whitney
Marshal, Michael P.
Akers, Aletha Y.

Year Published

2017

Volume Number

61

Issue Number

6

Pages

722-728

Edition

September 19, 2017

ISSN/ISBN

1054-139X

DOI

10.1016/j.jadohealth.2017.06.008

Reference ID

8249