Volume 37 - Article 54 | Pages 1735–1760
The contribution of differences in adiposity to educational disparities in mortality in the United States
Abstract
Background: There are large differences in life expectancy by educational attainment in the United States. Previous research has found obesity’s contribution to these differences to be small. Those findings may be sensitive to how obesity is estimated.
Methods: This analysis uses discrete-time logistic regressions with data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES), pooled from 1988 to 1994 and 1999 to 2010, to estimate the contribution of differences in adiposity, or body fat, to educational differences in mortality. I show that results depend upon the measure of adiposity used: body mass index (BMI) at the time of survey or lifetime maximum BMI.
Results: College graduates were less likely than high school graduates to be obese at the time of survey (25% vs. 34.6%, respectively) and were also less likely to have ever been obese (35.7% vs. 49.4%, respectively). Lifetime maximum BMI performed better than BMI at the time of survey in predicting mortality using criteria for model selection. Differences in maximum BMI were associated with between 10.3% and 12% of mortality differences between college graduates and all others, compared to between 3.3% and 4.6% for BMI at the time of survey. Among nonsmokers, between 18.4% and 27.6% of mortality differences between college graduates and all others were associated with differences in maximum BMI.
Contribution: Adiposity is an overlooked contributor to educational differences in mortality. Previous findings that obesity does not contribute to educational disparities were based on BMI at the time of survey, which is less informative than maximum BMI. The contribution of adiposity to educational mortality differences will likely grow as smoking prevalence declines. Health surveys should collect information on weight history.
Author’s Affiliation
- Yana Vierboom - Max-Planck-Institut für Demografische Forschung, Germany EMAIL
 
Other articles by the same author/authors in Demographic Research
            Socio-behavioral factors contributing to recent mortality trends in the United States
            
                Volume 51 - Article 7
        
Most recent similar articles in Demographic Research
            Feminicide as a determinant of Mexican female life expectancy in the 21st century
            
                Volume 53 - Article 24
                | Keywords: 
                    female life expectancy,
                    feminicide,
                    life expectancy,
                    Mexico,
                    mortality,
                    violence,
                    women
        
            Online obituaries as a complementary source of data for mortality in Canada
            
                Volume 53 - Article 22
                | Keywords: 
                    Canada,
                    computational demography,
                    digital traces,
                    mortality,
                    nowcasting,
                    online obituaries,
                    Quebec,
                    web scraping
        
            Where do we go from here? Partnership-parenthood trajectories of cohabitation as first union during young adulthood in the United States
            
                Volume 53 - Article 9
                | Keywords: 
                    cohabitation,
                    family inequality,
                    fertility,
                    marriage,
                    race/ethnicity,
                    transition to adulthood,
                    union formation,
                    United States of America
        
            The impact of population heterogeneity on the age trajectory of neonatal mortality: A study of US births 2008–2014
            
                Volume 53 - Article 7
                | Keywords: 
                    frailty,
                    heterogeneity,
                    heterogeneity,
                    infant mortality,
                    mortality,
                    mortality selection,
                    mortality selection,
                    neonatal mortality,
                    United States of America
        
            Can we estimate crisis death tolls by subtracting total population estimates? A critical review and appraisal
            
                Volume 52 - Article 23
                | Keywords: 
                    conflict demography,
                    death tolls,
                    demographic methods,
                    historical demography,
                    mortality,
                    mortality crises,
                    mortality estimates,
                    population balance
        
Cited References: 50
Download to Citation Manager
PubMed
Google Scholar