Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-tf8b9 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T20:09:32.285Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Thinness in a population of rural girls in Poland: 14-year changes and regional differentiation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 March 2019

Maria Chrzanowska
Affiliation:
State Higher Vocational School, Department of Biomedical Sciences, Nowy Sacz, Poland
Agnieszka Suder*
Affiliation:
Department of Anatomy, University of Physical Education, Krakow, Poland
The Late Teresa Łaska-Mierzejewska
Affiliation:
University of Physical Education, Warsaw, Poland
*
*Corresponding author. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Worldwide data indicate a growing number of energy homeostasis disorders, which are especially dangerous in childhood. The distribution and growing trends of overweight and obesity in children have been widely investigated, unlike the prevalence of too-low body weight and its determinants. This study aimed to estimate the frequency of body mass deficiency in Polish rural girls and differences among four Polish regions – Choszczno and Leszno in the north-west, and Ostrów Mazowiecka and Suwałki in the north-east. Data were taken from 7764 rural girls aged 9–18 years examined in 1987, when the country was in economic crisis, and 9431 such girls examined in 2001, when the country was undergoing political transformation. The frequency of weight deficiency was estimated based on BMI by applying the international standards of Cole. An Extent of Overweight (EOW) index was used to create an Extent of Thinness (EOT) index. A significant increase in weight deficiency was found in the rural girls – from 7.5% in 1987 to 8.9% in 2001 – and an increase in the EOT index from 0.37 in 1987 to 0.43 in 2001. Analysis by area of residence demonstrated significant differentiation. In the regions in north-west Poland, mainly inhabited by non-farming families, the prevalence of weight deficiency in girls almost doubled from 1987 to 2001, probably because of the mass and long-term unemployment that resulted from the closure of state farms in 1992. In contrast, in the north-east regions, the prevalence of weight deficiency remained almost unchanged over this period, with only a slight decrease, probably because the inhabitants were mainly farm and farm/working families with better living conditions. Despite the overall increase in thinness prevalence in rural girls in Poland, different living conditions have had different biological effects.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press, 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Chabros, E, Charzewska, J, Wajszczyk, B and Chwojnowska, Z (2011) Frequency of underweight in Warsaw adolescents in the last 3 decades. Problemy Higieny i Epidemiologii 92, 99102.Google Scholar
Chrzanowska, M, Kozieł, S and Ulijaszek, SJ (2007) Changes in BMI and the prevalence of overweight and obesity in children and adolescents in Cracow, Poland, 1971–2000. Economics and Human Biology 5, 370378.Google Scholar
Chrzanowska, M, Łaska-Mierzejewska, T and Suder, A (2013) Overweight and obesity in rural girls from Poland: changes between 1987 and 2001. Journal of Biosocial Science 45, 217229.Google Scholar
Chrzanowska, M and Suder, A (2010) The extent of overweight index in children and adolescents from Cracow, Poland (1971–2000). Homo – Journal of Comparative Human Biology 6, 453458.Google Scholar
Cole, TJ, Flegal, KM, Nicholls, D and Jackson, AA (2007) Body mass index cut offs to define thinness in children and adolescents: international survey. British Medical Journal 28, 194.Google Scholar
Cole, TJ and Lobstein, T (2012) Extended international (IOTF) body mass index cut-offs for thinness, overweight and obesity. Pediatric Obesity 7, 284294.Google Scholar
Gurzkowska, B, Kułaga, Z, Grajda, B, Góźdź, M, Wojtyło, M and Litwin, M (2017) The relationship between selected socioeconomic factors and thinness among Polish school-aged children and adolescents. European Journal of Pediatric 6, 797806.Google Scholar
Jolliffe, D (2004) Extent of overweight among US children and adolescents from 1971 to 2000. International Journal of Obesity 28, 49.Google Scholar
Lazzeri, G, Rossi, S, Kelly, C, Vereecken, C, Ahluwalia, N and Giacchi, MV (2014) Trends in thinness prevalence among adolescents in ten European countries and the USA (1998–2006): a cross-sectional survey. Public Health Nutrition 10, 22072215.Google Scholar
Łaska-Mierzejewska, T and Olszewska, E (2004) The maturation rate of girls living in rich and poor rural regions of Poland before and after the transformation of 1989. Homo – Journal of Comparative Human Biology 55, 129142.Google Scholar
Łaska-Mierzejewska, T and Olszewska, E (2006) Changes in the biological status of Polish girls from a rural region associated with economic and political processes in the period 1967–2001. Journal of Biosocial Science 38, 187202.Google Scholar
Łaska-Mierzejewska, T and Olszewska, E (2007) Anthropological assessment of changes in living conditions of the rural population in Poland in the period 1967–2001. Annals of Human Biology 34, 362376.Google Scholar
Mason, A, Rantanen, A, Kivimäki, H, Koivisto, AM and Joronen, K (2017) Family factors and health behaviour of thin adolescent boys and girls. Journal of Advanced Nursing 1, 177189.Google Scholar
Oblacińska, A, Tabak, I and Jodkowska, M (2007) Demographic and regional determinants of body weight deficiencies in Polish adolescents. Przegląd Epidemiologiczny 61, 785793.Google Scholar
Olszewska, E and Łaska-Mierzejewska, T (2008) Unemployment in the Polish countryside and its effect on the development and rate of maturation of rural girls. Anthropological Review 71, 3342.Google Scholar
Rolland-Cachera, MF, Castetbon, K, Arnault, N, Bellisle, F, Romano, MC, Lehingue, Y et al. (2002) Body mass index in 7–9-y-old French children: frequency of obesity, overweight and thinness. International Journal of Obesity and Related Disorders 26, 16101616.Google Scholar
Schönbeck, Y, van Dommelen, P, HiraSing, RA and van Buuren, S (2015) Thinness in the era of obesity: trends in children and adolescents in The Netherlands since 1980. European Journal of Public Health 2, 268273.Google Scholar
Wang, Y, Monteiro, C and Popkin, BM (2002) Trends of obesity and underweight in older children and adolescents in the United States, Brazil, China, and Russia. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 75, 971977.Google Scholar
Whitaker, KL, Jarvis, MJ, Boniface, D and Wardle, J (2011) The intergenerational transmission of thinness. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 10, 900905.Google Scholar
Wasiluk, A and Saczuk, J (2015) Underweight, overweight, and obesity in boys and girls at the age of 7–18 years from eastern Poland in the years 1986–2006. Studia Medyczne 31, 99105.Google Scholar
Wronka, I (2014) Socioeconomic status, body mass index and prevalence of underweight and overweight among Polish girls aged 7–18: a longitudinal study. Journal of Biosocial Science 46, 449461.Google Scholar
Wronka, I, Suliga, E and Pawlińska-Chmara, R (2012) Socioeconomic determinants of underweight and overweight in female Polish students in 2009. Anthropologischer Anzeiger 69, 8596.Google Scholar
Żądzińska, E, Rosset, I, Kozieł, S, Nawarycz, T, Borowska-Strugińska, B, Lorkiewicz, W et al. (2012) Frequency of under- and overweight among children and adolescents during the economic transition in Poland. Homo – Journal of Comparative Human Biology 633, 216232.Google Scholar