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Cultural and Lifestyle Determinants of Mexican American Adolescents’ Risk for Metabolic Syndrome

Cultural and Lifestyle Determinants of Mexican American Adolescents’ Risk for Metabolic Syndrome. Rafael E. Ruiz, ScM Deborah E. Bender, PhD, MPH Shoou-Yih D. Lee, PhD Michelle Mayer, PhD, RN, MPH

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Cultural and Lifestyle Determinants of Mexican American Adolescents’ Risk for Metabolic Syndrome

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  1. Cultural and Lifestyle Determinants of Mexican American Adolescents’ Risk for Metabolic Syndrome Rafael E. Ruiz, ScM Deborah E. Bender, PhD, MPH Shoou-Yih D. Lee, PhD Michelle Mayer, PhD, RN, MPH This research was partially supported by a National Research Service Award (NRSA) Pre-doctoral Traineeship from AHRQ sponsored by the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Grant No. T32-HS000032

  2. Introduction • “Latino/Hispanic” is used by CDC to generically describe Spanish speaking individuals • The Latino population is young • The majority are of Mexican descent (~60%) and growing rapidly • Acculturation is a socio-cultural construct that captures the degree which a person integrates the • social values, beliefs, and lifestyle of the dominant culture

  3. Introduction • Overweight and type-2 diabetes have both increased in adolescents • Metabolic syndrome affects adults (22%) and adolescents (4.2%) • Mexican Americans have been shown to have higher rates of metabolic syndrome

  4. Physical Activity Metabolic Syndrome Diet Overweight Acculturation Type-2 Diabetes CVD Conceptual Model

  5. Specific Aims 1) Determine if metabolic syndrome, physical activity, and diet differ among racial/ethnic groups 2) Explore the association of physical activity and diet with metabolic syndrome 3) Examine the association of acculturation with metabolic syndrome, physical activity, and diet in Mexican Americans

  6. Data • National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2002 • Pooled cross-section • Analytic dataset restrictions (N=2,002) • adolescents, 12-19 years of age, with a fasting plasma glucose level • not taking insulin, oral hypoglycemic agents, and not pregnant

  7. Variables • In adolescents, three or more of the following traits define metabolic syndrome Cook S, et al. Prevalence of a metabolic syndrome phenotype in adolescents: findings from the third National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1988-1994. Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med 2003 Sep;157(8):821-827

  8. Variables • Primary language was used to measure acculturation • read or spoken • used as a child • usually spoken at home • usually used to think • usually spoken with friends • Physical activity • Discrete: None vs. any • Continuous: Number, frequency, duration, and intensity

  9. Variables • Dietary measures • Variability: number of foods eaten/day • Frequency of eating out: number of restaurants meals/wk • Energy: total calories consumed • Total macronutrients: protein (gm), sugars (gm), cholesterol (mg), and fat (gm)

  10. Statistical Methods • Bivariate associations • Multivariate analysis • Logistic regression • Dependent variable: having metabolic syndrome • Independent variable of interest: acculturation • OLS regression • Dependent variables: Physical activity and dietary measures • Independent variable of interest: acculturation

  11. Prevalence of Metabolic Syndrome • Prevalence of metabolic syndrome was 4.8% • Inactive (8.9%*) vs. active (4.1%) • Low variability in diet (8.9%*) vs. higher variability (4.1%) • Males (6.6%*) vs. females (2.9%) • Overweight (25%**) vs. not-overweight (0.5%) *-significant at 5% level, **-significant at 1% level

  12. Differences among groups • Mexican Americans were more likely to... • be inactive (19%*) vs. non-Latinos (14%) • Be overweight (22%*) vs. non-Latinos (17%) • Mexican American males (25%*) were more likely than females (18%) to be overweight * *-significant at 5% level

  13. Associations with metabolic syndrome • Inactivity increases risk of metabolic syndrome (OR: 4.68, CI: 1.83-11.93) • Greater dietary variability decreases risk of metabolic syndrome (OR: 0.85, CI: 0.73-0.98) • Acculturation does not directly affect metabolic syndrome (OR: 1.52, CI: 0.78-2.97)

  14. Acculturation, physical activity, diet • Higher levels of acculturation decrease • inactivity [OR-0.65 (0.48-0.88)] • Higher levels of acculturation increase • # of physical activities (+0.41/month**) • energy (137 kcal/day*) • carbohydrates (+25 gm/day**) • saturated fat (+2 gm/day*) • # of times at restaurant food (+0.3 times/week*)

  15. Summary • Mexican American males are the most likely to develop metabolic syndrome • Higher likelihood of overweight, less physical activity, and fewer types of foods eaten • A higher level of acculturation • increases overweight • increases intake of calories, carbohydrates, saturated fat, and more meals eaten outside the home • increases physical activity, BUT it seems to be a weak effect

  16. Significance • Acculturation and metabolic syndrome have an indirect association • It is a risk factor in Mexican American adolescents • Underscores the importance of • reducing adolescent overweight • increasing physical activity • promoting healthy dietary options

  17. Considerations • There is no consensus on how to • define metabolic syndrome in adolescents • operationalize acculturation • Time in the U.S. was not a component of acculturation • Primary language spoken has been shown to be a good indicator of acculturation • Language skills are acquired over time so they are linked to the time spent in the U.S.

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