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Age, period and cohort effects on body mass index in New Zealand, 1997-2038
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
PUBLISHED
4 July 2018
CITATION
Wilson R, Abbott JH. Age, period and cohort effects on body mass index in New Zealand, 1997-2038. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health 2018;42(4):396-402. doi:10.1111/1753-6405.12804
Abstract
Objective To estimate the effects of age, period and birth cohort on observed trends, and to provide short- to medium-term projections of population BMI in New Zealand.
Methods Data were obtained from New Zealand national health surveys covering the period 1997 to 2015 (n=76,294 individuals). A Hierarchical Age-Period-Cohort (HAPC) model and an Age-Period model with interaction terms were specified for population groups defined by ethnicity and sex. Observed trends were extrapolated to estimate group-specific BMI projections for the period 2015—2038; these were weighted by projected population sizes to calculate population-wide BMI projections.
Results Population mean BMI increased from 26.4 kg/m^2^ (95%CI 26.2–26.5) in 1997 to 28.3 kg/m^2^ (95%CI 28.2–28.5) in 2015. Both models identified substantial, approximately linear, period trends behind this increase, with no significant cohort effects. Mean BMI was projected to reach 30.6 kg/m^2^ (95%CI 29.4—31.7; HAPC model) to 30.8 kg/m^2^ (95%CI 30.2—31.4; Age-Period model) by 2038.
Conclusion BMI continues to increase in New Zealand. On current trends, population mean BMI will exceed 30 kg/m^2^ — the clinical cut-off for obesity — by the early 2030s.
Implications for public health Unless prevented by comprehensive public health policy changes, increasing population obesity is likely to result in unfavourable economic and health impacts.