Title
Overweight and obesity among Ghanaian residents in the Netherlands: How do they weigh against their urban and rural counterparts in Ghana?
Author
Agyemang, C.
Owusu-Dabo, E.
de Jonge, A.
Martins, D.
Ogedegbe, G.
Stronks, K.
TNO Kwaliteit van Leven
Publication year
2009
Abstract
Objective: To investigate differences in overweight and obesity between first-generation Dutch-Ghanaian migrants in The Netherlands and their rural and urban counterparts in Ghana. Design: Cross-sectional study. Subjects: A total of 1471 Ghanaians (rural Ghanaians, n 532; urban Ghanaians, n 787; Dutch-Ghanaians, n 152) aged ≥17 years. Main outcome measures: Overweight (BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2) and obesity (BMI ≥ 30 kg/m2). Results: Dutch-Ghanaians had a significantly higher prevalence of overweight and obesity (men 69.1 %, women 79.5 %) than urban Ghanaians (men 22.0 %, women 50.0 %) and rural Ghanaians (men 10.3 %, women 19.0 %). Urban Ghanaian men and women also had a significantly higher prevalence of overweight and obesity than their rural Ghanaian counterparts. In a logistic regression analysis adjusting for age and education, the odds ratios for being overweight or obese were 3.10 (95 % CI 1.75, 5.48) for urban Ghanaian men and 19.06 (95 % CI 8.98, 40.43) for Dutch-Ghanaian men compared with rural Ghanaian men. Among women, the odds ratios for being overweight and obese were 3.84 (95 % CI 2.66, 5.53) for urban Ghanaians and 11.4 (95 % CI 5.97, 22.07) for Dutch-Ghanaians compared with their rural Ghanaian counterparts. Conclusion: Our current findings give credence to earlier reports of an increase in the prevalence of overweight/obesity with urbanization within Africa and migration to industrialized countries. These findings indicate an urgent need to further assess migration-related factors that lead to these increases in overweight and obesity among migrants with non-Western background, and their impact on overweight- and obesity-related illnesses such as diabetes among these populations. © The Authors 2008.
Subject
Health
Leefomgeving en gezondheid
Ethnic minority groups
Body mass
Cross-sectional study
Ethnology
Health
Migration
Risk
Statistical model
Adult
Body Mass Index
Cross-Sectional Studies
Developed Countries
Developing Countries
Emigration and Immigration
Female
Ghana
Humans
Logistic Models
Male
Netherlands
Obesity
Odds Ratio
Overweight
Rural Health
Urban Health
Urbanization
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:e0fa3770-ed88-45f3-9c90-861f02702a76
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/s1368980008003510
TNO identifier
241612
ISSN
1368-9800
Source
Public Health Nutrition, 12 (7), 909-916
Document type
article