Lifestyle Risk Factors for Chronic Disease by Family Origin Among Children in Multiethnic, Low-Income, Urban Neighborhoods

Lifestyle Risk Factors for Chronic Disease by Family Origin Among Children in Multiethnic, Low-Income, Urban Neighborhoods

Lifestyle Risk Factors for Chronic Disease by Family Origin Among Children in Multiethnic, Low-Income, Urban Neighborhoods

Lifestyle Risk Factors for Chronic Disease by Family Origin Among Children in Multiethnic, Low-Income, Urban Neighborhoodss

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Référence bibliographique [4120]

O’Loughlin, Jennifer, Paradis, Gilles, Meshefedjian, Garbis, Eppel, Ayelet, Belbraouet, Slimane et Gray-Donald, Katherine. 2004. «Lifestyle Risk Factors for Chronic Disease by Family Origin Among Children in Multiethnic, Low-Income, Urban Neighborhoods ». Ethnicity & Disease, vol. 14, no 3, p. 340-350.

Fiche synthèse

1. Objectifs


Intentions :
«To describe the prevalence of lifestyle risk factors (LRF) for chronic disease by family origin (FO) among children in multiethnic, low-income, urban neighborhoods.» (p. 340)

2. Méthode


Échantillon/Matériau :
«16 elementary schools located in disadvantaged, multiethnic neighborhoods in Montreal, Canada. [...] 4659 schoolchildren aged 9-12 in grades 4-6.» (p. 340)

Instruments :
«Subjects completed self-report questionnaires on sociodemographic characteristics and lifestyle behaviors; height and weight were measured in a standardized protocol. Fourteen FO groupings were identified based on language(s) spoken and countries of birth of both subjects and parents. We tested FO as an independent correlate of having 2 or more LRF, using the generalized estimating equations method.» (p. 340)

Type de traitement des données :
Analyse statistique

3. Résumé


«Relative to Canadian children, a higher proportion of Haitian, Portuguese, and other Central American/Caribbean children had 2 or more LRF, the proportion was similar among Cambodian, Vietnamese, Chinese, South American, East European, Arabic, Italian, and South Asian children, and lower among Salvadoran children. [...] Prevention programs for youth should take differential distribution of LRF by ethnicity into account.» (p. 340)