[Determinants of postpartum weight retention according to skin color among women in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil].

  • Jordão I
  • Kac G
ISSN: 1020-4989
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE To investigate factors associated with postpartum weight retention according to skin color in the city of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, as part of the effort to help control overweight and obesity. METHODS We carried out a cohort study with data collection at four points after delivery: 15 days, 2 months, 6 months, and 9 months. The 450 participants (15 to 45 years of age) were recruited from a maternity center and a city health center in Rio de Janeiro. Postpartum weight retention was defined as the dependent variable. The following covariates were investigated: maternal age, marital status, ability to read a letter, smoking, monthly family income, number of children, age at first delivery, a score for physical activity at work, and a score for physical activity during leisure time. The data were analyzed using multivariate linear mixed-effects models for longitudinal data. RESULTS The factors that remained associated with postpartum weight retention for white women were time after delivery (beta = -0.0061, P = 0.0002), marital status (married/single beta = -0.9279, P = 0.0457), and age at first delivery (beta = -0.1553, P = 0.0364). The factors for brown women were time after delivery (beta = -0.0062, P < 0.0001), marital status (married/single beta = -0.6000, P = 0.0145), and work physical activity score (beta = -0.1068, P = 0.0003). The factors for black women were smoking (beta = -1.4635, P = 0.0535) and score for physical activity during leisure time (beta = -0.2422, P = 0.0145). CONCLUSIONS The factors associated with postpartum weight retention were different for the three skin-color categories. Nevertheless, the data do not indicate the need for different interventions for the three skin-color groups. That is particularly true because the physical activity scores were among the variables associated with weight retention, and any initiative to control obesity should take physical activity into consideration. On the other hand, given the socioeconomic differences among the three skin-color categories, new studies should be developed to investigate in more detail the pattern of postpartum weight retention according to skin color.

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APA

Jordão, I. S. C., & Kac, G. (2005). [Determinants of postpartum weight retention according to skin color among women in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil]. Revista Panamericana de Salud Publica = Pan American Journal of Public Health, 18(6), 403–11. Retrieved from http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16536926

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