Long-term trends in central obesity in England: an age-period-cohort approach
Laura A. Gray, Magdalena Opazo Breton

TL;DR
This study shows that central obesity measures like waist-to-height ratio better reflect age-related obesity trends in England compared to BMI.
Contribution
The study applies an age-period-cohort model to compare trends in central obesity and BMI over time in England.
Findings
Central obesity measures showed a consistent linear increase with age until around 70 years.
BMI showed an inverted U-shaped age trend, unlike central obesity measures.
Period effects for WHtR increased significantly between 2005–2006 and 2019–2021.
Abstract
Central obesity measures, such as waist circumference (WC), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), and waist-to-height ratio (WHtR) have previously outperformed body mass index (BMI) in predicting health risks. BMI has been shown to underdiagnose obesity in older adults. We used data from the Health Survey for England (2005–2021) for 120,024 individuals aged 11–89 years, born in 1919–2008. High-risk classifications for WC, WHR, WHtR, and BMI were defined using established thresholds (World Health Organisation and the UK National Institute for Health and Care Excellence). Age, period (changes over time), and cohort effects were assessed using logistic regression with grouped variables to address the identification problem inherent in age-period-cohort (APC) models. The prevalence of high-risk increased over time for all obesity measures. Central obesity measures showed a consistent linear increase…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity and Health Practices · Health Promotion and Cardiovascular Prevention · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet
