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    Public Health Nutr. 2010 Oct;13(10A):1708-15.

    Clustering of lifestyle factors and association with overweight in adolescents of the Kiel Obesity Prevention Study.

    Source

    Institut für Humanernährung und Lebensmittelkunde, Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel, Düsternbrooker Weg 17, D-24105 Kiel, Germany.

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    To identify lifestyle clusters in adolescents and to characterize their association with overweight and obesity.

    DESIGN:

    Cross-sectional and longitudinal data of the Kiel Obesity Prevention Study.

    SETTING:

    Schools in Kiel, Germany.

    SUBJECTS AND METHODS:

    Cross-sectional data of 1894 adolescents aged 14 years and 4-year longitudinal data of a subsample of 389 children aged 10 and 14 years. Self-reported data of physical activity, modes of commuting to school, media time, nutrition, alcohol consumption and smoking were used to identify lifestyle clusters with two-step cluster analysis. Obesity indices (height, weight, waist circumference and fat mass (FM)) were measured.

    RESULTS:

    Three lifestyle clusters were identified: a 'low activity and low-risk behaviour' cluster (cluster 1: n 740, 39·1 %); a 'high media time and high-risk behaviour' cluster (cluster 2: n 498, 26·3 %); and a 'high activity and medium-risk behaviour' cluster (cluster 3: n 656, 34·6 %). Strictly speaking, none of these clusters was considered to be markedly healthy. The prevalence of overweight and obesity tended to be lower in cluster 3 (15·9 %) than in clusters 1 (20·4 %) and 2 (20·5 %; P = 0·053). Longitudinally, 4-year changes in FM were found to be lowest in cluster 2, but the 4-year incidence rate of obesity was lowest in cluster 3.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Explicit healthy lifestyles do not exist, but an active lifestyle reduces the incidence of obesity. In adolescents, health promotion should take into account the diversity of lifestyles and address specific lifestyle clusters.

    PMID:
    20883570
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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