AI Article Synopsis

  • The study examined the relationship between health metrics (BMI, waist circumference, blood pressure, FEV1, and PEF) and factors like social class, education, and region of residence in a cohort of adults from the British National Child Development Study.
  • Higher social classes were linked to increased lung function (FEV1 and PEF) and lower body measurements (BMI and waist circumference), while better education was associated with healthier metrics.
  • Among regional differences, Welsh women had the highest BMI but lowest lung function, whereas men showed regional variations in FEV1 and PEF; inter-generational social mobility had little impact on these health indicators.

Article Abstract

The aim of this study was to test whether Body Mass Index (BMI), waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, Forced Expiratory Volume (FEV1) and Peak Expiratory Flow (PEF) vary in relation to social class at birth and adulthood, educational level and region of residence, and also with inter-generational social, educational and regional mobility/migration. The study used 5702 adults (2894 males and 2718 females) from the longitudinal British National Child Development Study (all children born in England, Scotland and Wales during the first week in March 1958 with follow-up throughout childhood and adulthood, most recently at 55 years of age). In both sexes BMI and waist circumference tended to increase from social classes I+II to IV+V and higher social class was associated with higher mean FEV1 and PEF. Better-educated adults tended to have lower BMI and waist circumference, and higher mean FEV1 and PEF. Women from Wales had the highest mean BMI and waist circumference but the lowest mean PEF, while women in Scotland had the highest mean systolic blood pressure and the lowest mean FEV1. For men only, FEV1 and PEF showed regional variation and the lowest mean FEV1 was in Wales and the lowest PEF in Yorkshire & Humberside. Inter-generational social mobility was not found to be associated with any of the biomarkers, while educational mobility was related only to FEV1 and PEF. In both sexes, in unadjusted regression analysis regional migrant cohort members tended to have a lower mean BMI than sedentes. Regional male migrants also tended to have a lower waist circumference and a higher FEV1 and PEF than sedentes.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0021932017000700DOI Listing

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