SOCIAL MOBILITY AND ADIPOSITY IN A RECENTLY TRANSITIONED POPULATION OF HONG KONG: EVIDENCE FROM THE FAMILY COHORT
METHODS: In a cross-sectional study of 2,965 adults from 1,554 households, aged 20-80 years from the population-based FAMILY Cohort (Wave 2; 2012-13), we used multilevel linear regression models, adjusted for age, smoking status, use of alcohol, physical activity and family functioning, to assess the association of SEP trajectories with BMI, waist circumference and WHR using four combinations of low and high SEP in childhood (fathers’ occupation at age 10 years) and adulthood (highest attained education). Multilevel models account for the hierarchical structure of our data, where individuals are nested within households, allowing for household level variation in the outcomes. We assessed whether the associations varied by sex or age from the heterogeneity across strata and the significance of the relevant interaction term in an adjusted model including interactions of sex or age.
RESULTS: Association of life course SEP with adiposity varied by sex (p-value <0.01). Compared to men with consistently low SEP, upwardly mobile men had higher BMI (0.82, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.15 to 1.49) as did men with consistently high SEP, (0.83, 95% CI 0.20 to 1.45), who also had larger waist circumference (1.99 centimetre (cm), 95% CI 0.40 to 3.50). In women, upward social mobility was negatively associated with adiposity; women with consistently high SEP had the lowest WHR (-0.02, 95% CI -0.03 to -0.01) and waist circumference (-2.44 cm, 95% CI -3.87 to -1.00).
CONCLUSIONS: This study shows that social mobility and social disadvantage have sex-specific associations with particularly central adiposity in the recently transitioned population of Hong Kong. Accumulation of disadvantage across the life course was associated with central adiposity in women but not men. Exposures during puberty could be a mechanism driving such sex-specific associations.