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Department of
Cardiovascular Medicine, Ground Floor, South Wing, Edmund Blacket
Building, The Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, NSW 2031, Australia
Correspondence to: Professor Wilcken email: d.wilcken{at}unsw.edu.au
Accepted 18 August
1999
AIM
To determine
changes over time in the body mass index (BMI) profile of Australian
primary schoolchildren and to assess the effects of sex and ethnicity.
METHODS
Height and
weight were measured in 3645 children (1869 girls and 1596 boys), aged
5-12 years from 39 schools in southeastern Sydney during 1994-7.
Levels in the four largest ethnic groups of the population were
compared with those measured by the 1985 Australian Council on Health,
Physical Education, and Recreation (ACHPER) survey.
RESULTS
The study
population was 59.9% white (north European), 8.5% Mediterranean
white, 7.7% Asian, 7.7% other, and 16.2% mixed (mainly Asian-white
(36%) and Arab-white (24.7%)). There were sufficient numbers in four
groups for analysis and comparison with the ACHPER survey:
Mediterranean white, other white, mixed ethnicity, and Asian children.
The age and sex adjusted BMI was highest in Mediterranean white, then
white, mixed race, and Asian children. There were minimal differences
between sexes within each group. However, boys had an age and sex
adjusted BMI 1.5-6.5% higher (mean, 3.9%) than in ACHPER in 1985, as
did white girls (mean increase, 2.4%).
CONCLUSIONS
BMI in
southeastern Sydney schoolchildren is related strongly to ethnicity and
age; in boys and white girls it is on average 3.9% and 2.4% greater,
respectively, than that recorded in the 1985 ACHPER survey. We suggest
that this 10 year increase reflects a general trend in developed
countries. Because increased BMI in childhood tracks to adulthood and
is then associated with adverse effects on health, these findings
signal a need for prevention.
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