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You are here: Home / Retired Persons / Natalie Slopen, Sc.D. / Natalie Slopen Publications / Psychosocial Stress and Overweight and Obesity: Findings From the Chicago Community Adult Health Study

A.G. Cuevas, R. Chen, K.A. Thurber, N. Slopen, and D.R. Williams (2019)

Psychosocial Stress and Overweight and Obesity: Findings From the Chicago Community Adult Health Study

Annals of Behavioral Medicine, 53(11):1-11.

 

Background

Psychosocial stress has been implicated as a risk factor for overweight and obesity. However, research on psychosocial stressors and overweight and obesity has typically focused on single stressors in isolation, which may overestimate the impact of a specific stressor and fail to describe the role of cumulative stress on overweight and obesity risk.

Purpose

This study explores the association between overweight/obesity and cumulative exposure to a wide range of psychosocial stressors, among a multiracial/ethnic sample of adults.

Methods

Using secondary data from the Chicago Community Adult Health Study (n = 2,983), we conducted multinomial logistic regression analyses to quantify associations between eight psychosocial stressors, individually and in combination, and measured overweight and obesity, adjusted for sociodemographic factors, alcohol use and smoking.

Results

In separated covariate-adjusted models, childhood adversities (odds ratio [OR] = 1.16; confidence interval [CI] = [1.03, 1.30]), acute life events (OR = 1.18; CI = [1.04, 1.34]), financial strain (OR = 1.30; CI = [1.15, 1.47]), and relationship stressors (OR = 1.18; CI = [1.04, 1.35]) were associated with increased odds of obesity. In a model adjusted for all stressors simultaneously, financial strain was the only stressor independently associated with overweight (OR = 1.17; CI = [1.00, 1.36]) and obesity (OR = 1.21; CI = [1.05, 1.39]). Participants with stress exposure in the highest quintile across 2, 3, or ≥4 (compared to no) types of stressors had significantly higher odds of obesity.

Conclusions

Multiple types of stressors may be risk factors for obesity, and cumulative exposure to these stressors may increase the odds of obesity. Reducing exposure to stressors at the population level may have the potential to contribute to reducing the burden of obesity.

 

Mental Health, Health in Social Context, Obesity, Slopen, Health
Stress, Obesity, Overweight, Psychosocial stressors
PMID: 30917198 Published: March 27, 2019

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