Asociación entre adiposidad y diabetes mellitus tipo 2 según nivel educacional en población chilena: resultados de la Encuesta Nacional de Salud 2016-2017.

Parra-Soto Solange, Leiva-Ordoñez Ana María, Troncoso-Pantoja Claudia, Matus-Castillo Carlos, Petermann-Rocha Fanny, Martínez-Sanguinetti María Adela, Martorell Miquel, Ulloa Natalia, Concha-Cisternas Yenny, Cigarroa Igor, Villagrán Marcelo, Mardones Lore

Keywords: education, diabetes mellitus, adiposity, Obesity.

Abstract

Background: Adiposity and education are two independent risk factors for type 2 diabetes (T2D). However, there is limited evidence whether both education and adiposity are associated with T2D in an additive manner in the Chilean population. Aim: To investigate the joint association between adiposity and education with T2D in the Chilean adult population. Material and Methods: Analysis of data of the Chilean National Health Survey 2016-2017, which included 5,033 participants with a mean age of 43 years, (51% women). Poisson re-gression analyses with robust standard error were used to investigate the joint association of the education level and general and central adiposity with T2D. The results were reported as Prevalence Ratio and their 95% confidence intervals (PR, 95% CI). Results: Obesity was associated with a higher probability of having T2D in men than in women, however central adiposity was associated with a higher probability of having T2D in women than in men. Compared with men who had higher educa-tion (> 12 years) and had normal body weight, those with the same educational level and who were obese had 2.3-times higher probability of having T2D (PR: 2.35 [95% CI: 1.02; 5.39]). For women, having a low education and being obese was associated with 4.4-times higher probability of having T2D compared to those with higher education and normal body mass index (BMI) (PR: 4.47 [95% IC: 2.12; 9.24]). Similar results were observed when waist circumference was used as a marker of obesity rather than BMI. Conclusions: Women and men with higher BMI and low education had a higher risk of T2D. However, this risk was higher in women than in men.

Más información

Título de la Revista: REVISTA MEDICA DE CHILE
Volumen: 149
Editorial: Sociedad Médica de Santiago
Página de inicio: 819
Página final: 828
Idioma: Spanish