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Study of obesity in a rural children population and its relationship with anthropometric variables

To know the prevalence of obesity in primary and secondary school students, and to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of anthropometric variables for its detection. Cross-sectional study. Rural area of Córdoba. In the year 2014. Student population. A stratified sampling was performed according to age,...

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Published in:Atención primaria 2019-06, Vol.51 (6), p.341-349
Main Authors: Vaquero-Álvarez, Manuel, Romero-Saldaña, Manuel, Valle-Alonso, Joaquin, Llorente Cantarero, Francisco Jesús, Blancas-Sánchez, Isabel María, Fonseca Del Pozo, Francisco Javier
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container_end_page 349
container_issue 6
container_start_page 341
container_title Atención primaria
container_volume 51
creator Vaquero-Álvarez, Manuel
Romero-Saldaña, Manuel
Valle-Alonso, Joaquin
Llorente Cantarero, Francisco Jesús
Blancas-Sánchez, Isabel María
Fonseca Del Pozo, Francisco Javier
description To know the prevalence of obesity in primary and secondary school students, and to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of anthropometric variables for its detection. Cross-sectional study. Rural area of Córdoba. In the year 2014. Student population. A stratified sampling was performed according to age, gender and educational centers. A total of 323 students from 6 to 16 years were included in the study, all parents had signed informed consent. The prevalence of obesity was determined and sociodemographic, anthropometric, physical condition and dietary predictor variables were collected. A binary logistic regression was performed determining crude and adjusted Odds Ratio (OR) values, ROC curves were obtained and cut-off values were determined, calculating the sensitivity, specificity and Youden index. The prevalence of overweight and obesity was 26.2% and 22.3%, respectively. Only 15.2% of school children had an optimal Mediterranean diet. The waist-height ratio (WtHR) was the predictive variable with the highest adjusted OR 7.1 (4.3-11.6) and the largest area under the curve 0.954 (0.928-0.979), from a global cut-off value to discriminate obesity of 0.507. This gave a sensitivity of 90% and specificity of 87.2%. The high prevalence of obesity, the low-medium adherence to the Mediterranean diet and the low physical fitness make this population a priority target for the prevention of future cardiovascular events. The WtHR has been the best anthropometric predictor of obesity, recommending its use for the diagnosis of obesity in children at the expense of body mass index.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.aprim.2018.03.007
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title Study of obesity in a rural children population and its relationship with anthropometric variables
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