Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-wq2xx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-18T14:58:16.075Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Factors associated with childhood obesity in Spain. The OBICE study: a case–control study based on sentinel networks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 February 2011

Oscar Zurriaga*
Affiliation:
Area de Epidemiologia, Dirección General de Salud Publica, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain Centro Superior de Investigacion en Salud Publica, Avenida de Catalunya 21, 46020-Valencia, Spain
Jordi Pérez-Panadés
Affiliation:
Area de Epidemiologia, Dirección General de Salud Publica, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain
Joan Quiles Izquierdo
Affiliation:
Area de Epidemiologia, Dirección General de Salud Publica, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain
Milagros Gil Costa
Affiliation:
Consejeria de Sanidad, Junta de Castilla y Leon, Valladolid, Spain
Yolanda Anes
Affiliation:
Consejeria de Sanidad y Dependencia, Junta de Extremadura, Merida, Spain
Carmen Quiñones
Affiliation:
Consejeria de Salud, Gobierno de La Rioja, Logroño, Spain
Mario Margolles
Affiliation:
Consejeria de Sanidad, Principado de Asturias, Oviedo, Spain
Aurora Lopez-Maside
Affiliation:
Area de Epidemiologia, Dirección General de Salud Publica, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain
A Tomás Vega-Alonso
Affiliation:
Consejeria de Sanidad, Junta de Castilla y Leon, Valladolid, Spain
María Teresa Miralles Espí
Affiliation:
Area de Epidemiologia, Dirección General de Salud Publica, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain
*
*Corresponding author: Email zurriaga_osc@gva.es
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Objective

To estimate the association strength of dietary behaviour and sedentary habits in relation to childhood obesity in Spain.

Design

A matched case–control study was carried out using data collected by sentinel network paediatricians in general practices.

Setting

Five Spanish autonomous communities.

Subjects

Cases were 437 children (2–14 years old) with BMI >95th percentile according to Spanish reference tables. Controls were 751 children (2–14 years old; two paired per case) with BMI <84th percentile. Data were collected in two phases: individual (questionnaires filled in by sentinel paediatricians) and family (self-administered questionnaires filled in a family environment). Crude OR and adjusted OR (ORc and adj OR) for the given variables were calculated using a simple and multiple conditional logistic regression analysis.

Results

The factors with the greatest effect on obesity were family history of obesity: both parents (adj OR = 11·2), mother but not father (adj OR = 9·1), father but not mother (adj OR = 6·1), siblings (adj OR = 2·7); and eating between meals (adj OR = 2·5) and consumption of sweets and soft drinks >2 times/week (adj OR = 2·0). The highest protection effect was found for five meals per day (adj OR = 0·5), the regular consumption of breakfast (adj OR = 0·5) and for eating fruit for dessert (adj OR = 0·6). Factors related to sedentary habits did not appear as noteworthy.

Conclusions

We have determined the association between certain dietary behaviour and family history with childhood obesity in several Spanish regions.

Type
Research paper
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2011

Childhood obesity is determined by a complex interplay of genetic, environmental, behavioural and cultural factors, which lead to an energy imbalance. Social and cultural factors appear to play an important role in shaping the closest behavioural patterns that give rise to body weight gain(Reference Glass and McAtee1).

In Spain, as well as in other developed countries, the prevalence of childhood obesity has increased in recent decades. From 1984 to 2000, the prevalence in children aged 6–12 years has multiplied by three(Reference Vitoria and Dalmau2). The highest increase was observed in 10-year-old boys(3).

There have been several cross-sectional studies carried out in Spain on childhood obesity that have allowed us to know the prevalence and its related factors, but there are few case–control design studies to determine factors with association(Reference Santos, Ochoa and Patiño4Reference Ochoa, Santos and Azcona6). One of them(Reference Ochoa, Moreno-Aliaga and Martínez-González7) suggests that physical leisure-time activity, a family history of obesity, watching television (TV) and sugar-sweetened beverage consumption are important predictive variables for childhood obesity.

None of these case–control studies was carried out using primary health-care cases, but rather with hospital cases. Primary health care in Spain is a proxy of the general population, mainly in childhood, because of its proximity and coverage. Health sentinel networks have been working in the primary health-care level in Spain for >20 years(Reference Vega Alonso, Zurriaga Llorens and Galmés Truyols8), and they have proved the effectiveness of carrying out epidemiological studies with different designs in a quick and inexpensive way, because the data are collected during the standard consultation time.

Because childhood obesity is an important adult obesity predictor and a rising problem, we considered that it would be interesting to develop the possibility of using this easier way of studying with a case–control design for this topic.

The objective of the present study was to determine the association between dietetic behaviour, physical activity and obesity in children under 15 years of age in a large part of the Spanish population using sentinel networks with an age- and gender-matched case–control study design.

Methods

The OBICE (OBesidad Infantil en redes CEntinelas) study is a case–control study of childhood obesity and its determining factors in several Spanish regions (autonomous communities) carried out in sentinel networks.

The study population was recruited from 106 paediatric consultations in the sentinel networks of five regions (Asturias, Castilla y Leon, Extremadura, La Rioja and Comunitat Valenciana). These territories cover a population of 1 108 517 children (2–14 years of age; 20·4 % of the Spanish child population).

Children between 2 and 14 years of age attending a sentinel paediatric consultation (independent of the cause of consultation) were candidates considered eligible for inclusion in the present study. Cases were defined as children with a BMI >95th percentile (according to ‘Fundación Orbegozo-Sobradillo’ tables(Reference Sobradillo, Aguirre and Aresti9)) identified for the first time. Controls (two per case) were children with a BMI <84th percentile (according to the same reference tables) matched to the gender and age (±1 year) of cases. Sometimes it was not possible to obtain two controls per case, and then only one control was chosen. The study included 1188 individuals, 437 cases and 751 controls. Data were collected in 2007 and 2008.

Children with a pathology that could condition dietary habits and/or physical activity and/or weight and height development were excluded as cases. For controls, obesity as the cause of consultation and a prior diagnosis of obesity (controlled or treated by therapeutic or intervention procedures) were also causes for exclusion. The siblings of cases were excluded as controls. Parents or legal tutors provided consent for both cases and controls.

Two questionnaires were used: one to be filled in by each paediatrician in the practice and another to be filled in by the children's family (self-completed). Both included questions about food frequency.

The paediatrician's questionnaire included information about sex, age, weight and height, country of origin (for children and parents), family background (parental obesity and sibling obesity), personal background (breast-feeding, birth weight and height), physical activity (h/week), screen activities (time use) and dietary habits (breakfast, number of meals per day, whether fruit and vegetables are usually consumed, consumption of sweets and soft drinks per week).

The family's questionnaire also included information about parents’ occupation and their educational level, children's sleeping hours, leisure-time physical activity, time spent watching TV, playing video games and using computer (h/week). A semi-quantitative FFQ was integrated into it, including breakfast composition, portions of several foods consumed per week, usual dessert and usual drink and place of the principal meal (school, parents’ home or grandparents’ home). The questions about food frequency are adapted as a short questionnaire from a validated questionnaire used in other studies(10) in 2005. For the analysis, the food frequency answers were categorized according to the recommendations of the Spanish Society of Community Nutrition(Reference Dapcich, Salvador and Ribas11), and the inadequate consumption by food group was calculated by comparison with Spanish dietary recommendations(Reference Aranceta, Pérez-Rodrigo and Ribas12).

Statistical analysis

Data from both questionnaires were used. Means and 95 % CI for continuous variables and frequencies and percentages for categorical variables were calculated. When the measurement was in h/week, variables were categorized into two categories, indicating risk of obesity or not. A new category named ‘not available’ was created in some variables whenever data were incomplete in order to improve the power of the analysis. Social class was calculated through both parents’ occupations and the family's social class was assigned according to the correspondence analysis method(Reference Zurriaga, Martínez-Beneito and Abellán13). Differences of proportions between cases and controls for each categorical variable were analysed by simple conditional logistic regression(Reference Agresti14). The P values of the likelihood ratio test were used. Crude OR (ORc) and 95 % CI were also drawn from simple conditional logistic regression. As we intended to control the potential confounding effect of some of the variables, to estimate the simultaneous effects of multiple variables on the risk of childhood obesity, a multiple conditional logistic regression model with a forward stepwise selection method was performed. The χ 2 statistic score was used to assess the importance of each factor at each stepwise run. The statistical significance level required for inclusion was set at 0·10 and for those remaining in the model at 0·05. The adjusted OR (adj OR) was estimated with 95 % CI. Statistical analysis was performed using R statistical software(15) version 2·10·1 (R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Vienna, Austria).

Results

Data from 1188 children were collected. The distribution between sentinel networks was proportional to their population. For 123 cases, two controls could not be obtained.

Table 1 shows a brief description of the principal variables used for matching, as well as the birth weight (g) and height (cm) and the BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS; BMI was converted into SDS using the revised British 1990 reference)(Reference Cole, Bellizzi and Flegal16, Reference Cole, Freeman and Preece17). According to international standards criteria, we identified from our defined cases eighty-seven children as non-obese, but all of them were overweight according to the same criteria. For controls, there were ninety children with overweight according to international standards criteria but none of them were obese according to the same criteria.

Table 1 Characteristics of cases and controls for matching or continuous variables: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

OBICE, OBesidad Infantil en redes CEntinelas; BMI-SDS, standard deviation score BMI.

The distribution for variables included in the paediatrician's questionnaire, their ORc, the respective 95 % CI and statistical significance test are presented in Table 2. In the crude analysis (non-adjusted), cases had a higher proportion of history of family obesity (parents or siblings) than did controls. Other identified obesity risk factors were the consumption of sweets and soft drinks >2 times/week, >3 h/d of screen activities and eating between meals.

Table 2 Risk factors for childhood obesity from paediatrician's and family's questionnaires: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

OBICE, OBesidad Infantil en redes CEntinelas; ref., reference category; TV, television.

Results of the simple conditional logistic regression analysis of risk factors for childhood obesity are presented here.

*Likelihood ratio test.

In the crude analysis, dietary variables with a protection value and statistical differences between cases and controls were: consuming five meals per day, daily consumption of fruit, the usual consumption of vegetables, usual school refectory use, >2 h of leisure-time physical activity, regular consumption of breakfast, consuming fruit for dessert, a healthy breakfast, sleeping ≥10 h and not using soft drinks in meals as usual. The family's social class showed a P value equal to 0·005 with a difference between low (reference) and high family social class (ORc = 0·4). The parents’ educational level (secondary education or more) showed an ORc of 0·7 for the mother's education and 0·6 for the father's education.

Table 3 shows the results of the semi-quantitative FFQ integrated into the family's questionnaire (ORc, 95 % CI and P values). In the crude analysis, some of the dietary factors showed a statistically significant difference (P < 0·001) between cases and controls. They were: recommended consumption of fish and a consumption of soft drinks <2 times/week.

Table 3 Risk factors for childhood obesity from family's questionnaire (semi-quantitative FFQ): OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

OBICE, OBesidad Infantil en redes CEntinelas; ref., reference category.

Results of the simple conditional logistic regression analysis of risk factors for childhood obesity are presented here.

*Likelihood ratio test.

Table 4 shows the result of the simultaneous effects of multiple variables on the risk of childhood obesity through the multiple conditional logistic regression analysis (adj OR, 95 % CI and P value). The factors with more effect on childhood obesity were those included in the family's history of obesity. The highest effect was for both parents’ obesity: when both parents were obese the adj OR was 11·2. If the father was obese, but not the mother, the adj OR was 6·12. If the mother was obese, but not the father, the adj OR was 9·08. Siblings’ obesity showed an adj OR close to 3·0. The dietary behaviour with a greater strength of association with obesity was snacking or eating between meals (adj OR = 2·5), followed by the consumption of sweets and soft drinks >2 times/week (adj OR = 2·0). The highest protection effect was found for consumption of five meals per day (adj OR = 0·5), regular consumption of breakfast (adj OR = 0·5) and consuming fruit for dessert (adj OR = 0·6). The other factor included in the final model was the consumption of meat, but the 95 % CI of the adj OR for more or less consumption was not significant.

Table 4 Multiple conditional logistic regression analysis of risk factors for childhood obesity: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

OBICE, OBesidad Infantil en redes CEntinelas; ref., reference category.

*Likelihood ratio test.

Discussion

The main results of the OBICE study showed the importance of the family environment in several parts of Spain, especially parents’ obesity, as a risk factor for childhood obesity. The results are not representative for the Spanish child population, but the regions included represent an important proportion of Spanish children (20·4 %). As far as we know, the present study is the first non-hospital-based case–control study on childhood obesity in Spain with a wide population framework, both geographically and proportionally.

The selection of cut-off points for obesity excluded the overlap between cases and controls. We chose a BMI value of >95th percentile for considering a child as obese because this was the criterion recommended and frequently used in epidemiological studies on childhood obesity(Reference Moreno, Sarriá and Fleta18Reference Poskitt20). Subsequent recommendations(3) indicate the use of the 97th percentile. Thus, it is possible that our case population includes individuals who could be categorized as overweight, meaning that the results underestimate some of the real effects of obesity; however, it is known(Reference Serra-Majem, Ribas-Barba and Pérez-Rodrigo21) that the most frequently used Spanish tables (the Hernández tables(Reference Hernández, Castellet and Narvaiza22)) overestimate obesity, hence the effect would be minor. Moreover, the quantity of cases between the 95th and 97th percentiles in our study was relatively small. When we repeated the analysis, excluding cases and their associated controls between the 95th and the 97th percentiles (fifty-three cases and ninety-six controls), the results were essentially unchanged (results not shown).

Many studies emphasise the importance of parents’ obesity, especially the mother's obesity, as a risk factor for childhood obesity(Reference Parsons, Power and Logan25Reference Gibson, Byrne and Davis27), showing that parents’ obesity and overweight increase the risk of childhood obesity. This is because, in addition to genetic factors, family members share behavioural risk factors including energy and percentage of fat intake, food preferences(Reference Nicklas, Baranowski and Baranowski28) and physical activity, which may influence children's weight later on. After performing the crude analysis, the final multivariate model excluded potential confounders such as breast-feeding(Reference Daniels, Arnett and Eckel23), social class(Reference Gordon-Larsen, Adair and Popkin24) and some dietetic factors and physical activity related to parental obesity(Reference Livingstone19). The final model showed an association with parents’ and siblings' obesity, highlighting the importance of obesity prevention in the family environment, involving fathers and mothers actively in acquiring knowledge to adopt healthy behaviour for diet and physical activity, because there is evidence of the long-term effectiveness of family-based treatment programmes for obese children(Reference Epstein, Valoski and Wing29).

The categorization as obese for parents and siblings was based on their own information and modified by the paediatrician's observations, but it was very difficult to make a direct measurement in a standard high-pressure health-care environment. Owing to this fact, our results are affected because informants systematically overestimated the height and underestimated the weight of their family members(Reference Reed and Price30, Reference Gorber, Tremblay and Moher31), underestimating obesity (in approximately one person out of three)(Reference Dauphinot, Wolff and Naudin32), but the bias could be partially made up for by face-to-face contact, which reduces it(Reference Ezzati, Martin and Skjold33).

The results showed dietary factors as a main risk, such as eating between meals and the consumption of sweets and soft drinks >2 times/week. Although there is little information about meal frequency in children and adolescents, a similar pattern has been described(Reference Aranceta, Pérez-Rodrigo and Ribas12) in Spanish children and young people, related to spending more time watching TV (‘snacky’ pattern). Other studies(Reference Van den Bulck and Van Mierlo34) have also related snacking to the consumption of snacks and soft drinks while watching TV. In the OBICE study, after adjusting screen activity hours (including TV), the factors remain, and snacking seems to be an important factor associated with childhood obesity independently of other behavioural or social factors. One limitation of our results is the lack of knowledge about the composition of this snacking. With regard to soft drink consumption, there is clear evidence(Reference Vartanian, Schwartz and Brownell35) about the associations of soft drink consumption with increased energy intake and body weight in children, adolescents and adults(Reference Malik, Schulze and Hu36). Other studies carried out in Spain on 6–7-year-old children(Reference Rodriguez-Artalejo, López García and Gorgojo37) showed that the impact of sweetened soft drinks, together with bakery products and yoghurt, on the quality of their diet is only modest.

The factors inversely associated with childhood obesity found in our study were meal frequency, regular consumption of breakfast and consumption of fruit for dessert. Bellisle et al. (Reference Bellisle, McDevitt and Prentice38) have concluded that there does not appear to be a relationship between meal patterning and obesity; however, our results on meal frequency are consistent with those of other studies in children, in which a high meal frequency was inversely associated with childhood obesity(Reference Toschke, Küchenhoff and Koletzko39, Reference Toschke, Thorsteinsdottir and von Kries40), not explained by potential confounders.

There is a lot of evidence(Reference Moreno, Rodríguez and Fleta41) that regularly consuming breakfast is a protective factor and skipping it is associated with childhood, adolescent and pre-school(Reference Dubois, Girard and Potvin Kent42) obesity. The percentage skipping breakfast shown by the OBICE results is high (10·53 %) for obesity cases, particularly compared with results in Spanish adolescents presented in the AVENA (Alimentación y Valoración del Estado Nutricional en Adolescentes) Study (8·6 % in females and 3·5 % in males)(Reference Moreno, Kersting and de Henauw43), similar to the enKid study(Reference Aranceta, Pérez and Ribas44) (8·2 % for children and adolescents). To fight against childhood obesity it is necessary to promote breakfast as a main meal (15–20 % energy intake per day).

To consume fruit for dessert appears as an important protective factor. Increased fruit consumption has been associated(Reference Vioque, Weinbrenner and Castello45) with a lower risk of a medium weight gain for adults, and the enKid study(Reference Aranceta, Pérez and Ribas44) in Spain has shown that a lower consumption of fruit and vegetables is associated with a higher prevalence of obesity. Regarding the behaviour of consuming fresh fruit for dessert, one of the bases of the Mediterranean diet pattern(Reference Willett, Sacks and Trichopoulou46), and the relationship with childhood obesity, there is not enough evidence in the literature.

Factors related to sedentary habits did not appear as noteworthy in the final results, but the univariate analysis showed that controls presented a better situation than cases with regard to time for screen activities and physical activities. It is possible that they could be affected by a non-differential misclassification because of the measurement difficulties for physical activity variables, particularly in the health-care environment.

Previous studies in both children and adults have shown an increased prevalence of obesity associated with lower sleeping duration(Reference Patel and Hu47). In our study, the apparent protective effect associated with ⩾10 h of sleep seen in the univariate analysis was not statistically significant in the multivariate analysis. However, if sleep deprivation causes obesity through its effects on decreasing physical activity and activation of hormonal pathways leading to increasing appetite(Reference Cappuccio, Taggart and Kandala48), our multivariate model might be overadjusting for the mechanisms that explain this relationship.

The use of sentinel networks implies strengths and weaknesses for this kind of survey with a case–control design. Its strength is that it is an easy way of conducting the study because the networks are ready to readdress the topic of study and conduct it within a short time; in addition, it is possible to obtain a sample closer to the general population than for other types of approximations. Its weakness is the participation of a lot of researchers with the possibility of different criteria. To avoid this, a study protocol with strict indications was distributed to each participant and the network coordination centres assumed the validation and homogenization task. Another difficulty was the selection of controls because at certain ages healthy non-obese children do not attend paediatric consultations. Therefore, it was not possible to obtain two controls for each case for all cases, but the proportion of cases (28·14 %) with only one control was relatively small. Finally, an important limitation was produced by the already mentioned auto-report of the parents’ and sibling's obesity.

The OBICE study has shown the importance of obesity prevention in the family environment and the need to act on certain dietary habits in childhood, increasing the frequency of meals, reducing the consumption of sweets and soft drinks, promoting breakfast and healthy desserts. The results of the OBICE study also show the power of health sentinel networks to implement this type of epidemiological design.

Acknowledgements

The present study was partially funded by a Spanish Science and Innovation Ministry grant (Fondo de Investigación Sanitaria, Convocatoria de Ayudas Para Proyectos de Investigación del Programa de Promoción de la Investigación Biomédica y en Ciencias de la Salud del Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo en 2006, Expediente PI06/0923). The authors have no conflict of interest to declare. O.Z. designed the study, participated in the analysis and wrote the first draft. J.P.-P. handled the data analysis and performed the statistical analysis. J.Q.I., M.G.C., Y.A., C.Q., M.M., A.L.-M., A.T.V.-A. and M.T.M.E. collaborated in the design of the study and also participated in the analysis and manuscript development. The RECENT OBICE Research Group participated in collecting the data. The authors thank all the paediatricians and public health professionals involved in the health sentinel networks throughout the autonomous communities of Castilla y León, Extremadura, Asturias, La Rioja and Comunitat Valenciana for their voluntary work. They also acknowledge F. Javier Nieto (University of Wisconsin – Madison, USA) for his useful comments on previous versions of the manuscript, and Carlos Abellan for his useful help.

The RECENT OBICE Research Group comprises: José Amancio Peñuelas Ruiz, María Jesús Redondo Gallego, Alejandro Cremades Bernabeu (Dirección General de Salud Pública, Conselleria de Sanitat, Generalitat Valenciana, Valencia, Spain); Ana María Sacristán Martín, Rufino Álamo Sanz (Consejeria de Sanidad, Junta de Castilla y León, Valladolid, Spain); Bertomeu Serra Pons, Arturo Meliveo Moreno (Agencia Valenciana de Salud, Valencia, Spain); Julián Mauro Ramos Aceitero (Servicio Extremeño de Salud, Junta de Extremadura, Mérida, Spain).

References

1. Glass, TA & McAtee, MJ (2006) Behavioral science at the crossroads in public health: extending horizons, envisioning the future. Soc Sci Med 62, 16501671.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
2. Vitoria, I & Dalmau, J (2003) Prevalencia de la obesidad en la infancia y la adolescencia. Actividades desde la atención primaria (Prevalence of obesity in childhood and adolescence. Activities from primary care). Pediátrika 23, 373382.Google Scholar
3. Gobierno de España, Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo (2007) 1a Conferencia de Prevención y Promoción de la Salud en la Práctica Clínica en España. Prevención de la obesidad infantil y juvenil (1st Conference on Prevention and Health Promotion in Clinic Practice. Prevention of Childhood and Youth Obesity). Madrid: Ministerio de Sanidad y Consumo.Google Scholar
4. Santos, JL, Ochoa, MC, Patiño, A et al. (2005) No evidence of association between the serotonin 2A receptor – 1438G/A promoter polymorphism and childhood obesity in a Spanish population: a case–parent study and a matched case–control study. Nutr Neurosci 8, 207211.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Larqué, E, Gil-Campos, M, Ramírez-Tortosa, MC et al. (2006) Postprandial response of trans fatty acids in prepubertal obese children. Int J Obes (Lond) 30, 14881493.Google Scholar
6. Ochoa, MC, Santos, JL, Azcona, C et al. (2007) Association between obesity and insulin resistance with UCP2–UCP3 gene variants in Spanish children and adolescents. Mol Genet Metab 92, 351358.Google Scholar
7. Ochoa, MC, Moreno-Aliaga, MJ, Martínez-González, MA et al. (2007) Predictor factors for childhood obesity in a Spanish case–control study. Nutrition 23, 379384.Google Scholar
8. Vega Alonso, AT, Zurriaga Llorens, O, Galmés Truyols, A et al. (2006) Guía de principios y métodos de las redes centinelas (Guide to the principles and methods of health sentinel networks in Spain). Gac Sanit 20, Suppl. 3, S52S60.Google Scholar
9. Sobradillo, B, Aguirre, A, Aresti, U et al. (2004) Curvas y Tablas de Crecimiento (Estudios Longitudinal y Transversal) (Growth Curves and Tables (Longitudinal and Cross-Sectional Surveys)). Bilbao: Fundación Faustino Orbegozo Eizaguirre.Google Scholar
10. Generalitat Valenciana, Conselleria de Sanitat (2007) Encuesta de Salud de la Comunitat Valenciana (2005) (2005 Health Survey of Comunitat Valenciana). Valencia: Dirección General de Ordenación Evaluación e Investigación Sanitaria, Oficina del Plan de Salud, Conselleria de Sanitat.Google Scholar
11. Dapcich, V, Salvador, G, Ribas, L et al. (2007) Guía de la Alimentación Saludable (Guide for Healthy Eating). Madrid: Sociedad Española de Nutrición Comunitaria.Google Scholar
12. Aranceta, J, Pérez-Rodrigo, C, Ribas, L et al. (2003) Sociodemographic and lifestyle determinants of food patterns in Spanish children and adolescents: the enKid study. Eur J Clin Nutr 57, Suppl. 1, S40S44.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
13. Zurriaga, O, Martínez-Beneito, MA, Abellán, JJ et al. (2004) Assessing the social class of children from parental information to study possible social inequalities in health outcomes. Ann Epidemiol 14, 378384.Google Scholar
14. Agresti, A (2002) Categorical Data Analysis, 2nd ed. New York: John Wiley & Sons, Inc.Google Scholar
15. R Development Core Team (2009) R: A Language and Environment for Statistical Computing. Vienna: R Foundation for Statistical Computing.Google Scholar
16. Cole, TJ, Bellizzi, MC, Flegal, KM et al. (2000) Establishing a standard definition for child overweight and obesity worldwide: international survey. BMJ 320, 12401243.Google Scholar
17. Cole, TJ, Freeman, JV & Preece, MA (1998) British 1990 growth reference centiles for weight, height, body mass index and head circumference fitted by maximum penalized likelihood. Stat Med 17, 407429.Google Scholar
18. Moreno, L, Sarriá, A, Fleta, J et al. (2000) Trends in body mass index and overweight among children and adolescents in the region of Aragon (Spain) from 1985 to 1995. Int J Obes Metab Disord 24, 925931.Google Scholar
19. Livingstone, B (2000) Epidemiology of childhood obesity in Europe. Eur J Pediatr 159, Suppl. 1, S14S34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
20. Poskitt, EME, and the European Childhood Obesity Group (1995) Committee report. Defining childhood obesity: the relative body mass index (BMI). Acta Paediatr 84, 961963.Google Scholar
21. Serra-Majem, L, Ribas-Barba, L, Pérez-Rodrigo, C et al. (2007) Methodological limitations in measuring childhood and adolescent obesity and overweight in epidemiological studies: does overweight fare better than obesity? Public Health Nutr 10, 11121120.Google Scholar
22. Hernández, M, Castellet, J, Narvaiza, JL et al. (1988) Curvas y Tablas de Crecimiento (Growth Curves and Tables). Madrid: Editorial Garsi.Google Scholar
23. Daniels, SR, Arnett, DK, Eckel, RH et al. (2005) Overweight in children and adolescents. Circulation 111, 19992012.Google Scholar
24. Gordon-Larsen, P, Adair, LS & Popkin, BM (2003) The relationship of ethnicity, socioeconomic factors, and overweight in US adolescents. Obes Res 11, 121129.Google Scholar
25. Parsons, TJ, Power, C, Logan, S et al. (1999) Childhood predictors of adult obesity: a systematic review. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 23, Suppl. 8, S1S107.Google ScholarPubMed
26. Burke, V, Beilin, LJ, Simmer, K et al. (2005) Predictors of body mass index and associations with cardiovascular risk factors in Australian children: a prospective cohort study. Int J Obes (Lond) 29, 1523.Google Scholar
27. Gibson, LY, Byrne, SM, Davis, EA et al. (2007) The role of family and maternal factors in childhood obesity. Med J Aust 186, 591595.Google Scholar
28. Nicklas, TA, Baranowski, T, Baranowski, J et al. (2001) Family and child-care provider influences on preschool children's fruit, juice, and vegetable consumption. Nutr Rev 59, 224235.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
29. Epstein, LH, Valoski, A, Wing, RR et al. (1990) Ten-year follow-up of behavioural, family-based treatment for obese children. JAMA 264, 25192523.Google Scholar
30. Reed, DR & Price, RA (1998) Estimates of the heights and weights of family members: accuracy of informant reports. Int J Obes Relat Metab Disord 22, 827835.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
31. Gorber, SC, Tremblay, M, Moher, D et al. (2007) A comparison of direct vs. self-report measures for assessing height, weight and body mass index: a systematic review. Obes Rev 8, 307326.Google Scholar
32. Dauphinot, V, Wolff, H, Naudin, F et al. (2009) New obesity body mass index threshold for self-reported data. J Epidemiol Community Health 63, 128132.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
33. Ezzati, M, Martin, H, Skjold, S et al. (2006) Trends in national and state-level obesity in the USA after correction for self-report bias: analysis of health surveys. J R Soc Med 99, 250257.Google Scholar
34. Van den Bulck, J & Van Mierlo, J (2004) Energy intake associated with television viewing in adolescents, a cross sectional study. Appetite 43, 181184.Google Scholar
35. Vartanian, LR, Schwartz, MB & Brownell, KD (2007) Effects of soft drink consumption on nutrition and health: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Am J Public Health 97, 667675.Google Scholar
36. Malik, VS, Schulze, MB & Hu, FB (2006) Intake of sugar-sweetened beverages and weight gain: a systematic review. Am J Clin Nutr 84, 274288.Google Scholar
37. Rodriguez-Artalejo, F, López García, E, Gorgojo, L et al. (2003) Consumption of bakery products, sweetened soft drinks and yogurt among children aged 6–7 years: association with nutrient intake and overall diet quality. Br J Nutr 89, 419428.Google Scholar
38. Bellisle, F, McDevitt, R & Prentice, AM (1997) Meal frequency and energy balance. Br J Nutr 77, Suppl. 1, S57S70.Google Scholar
39. Toschke, AM, Küchenhoff, H, Koletzko, B et al. (2005) Meal frequency and childhood obesity. Obes Res 13, 19321938.Google Scholar
40. Toschke, AM, Thorsteinsdottir, KH & von Kries, R (2009) Meal frequency, breakfast consumption and childhood obesity. Int J Pediatr Obes 4, 242248.Google Scholar
41. Moreno, LA, Rodríguez, G, Fleta, J et al. (2010) Trends of dietary habits in adolescents. Crit Rev Food Sci Nutr 50, 106112.Google Scholar
42. Dubois, L, Girard, M & Potvin Kent, M (2006) Breakfast eating and overweight in a pre-school population: is there a link? Public Health Nutr 9, 436442.Google Scholar
43. Moreno, LA, Kersting, M, de Henauw, S et al. (2005) How to measure dietary intake and food habits in adolescence: the European perspective. Int J Obes (Lond) 29, Suppl. 2, S66S77.Google Scholar
44. Aranceta, J, Pérez, C, Ribas, L et al. (2005) Epidemiología y factores determinantes de la obesidad infantil y juvenil en España (Epidemiology and determinants of childhood and adolescent obesity in Spain). Rev Pediatr Aten Primaria 7, Suppl. 1, S13S20.Google Scholar
45. Vioque, J, Weinbrenner, T, Castello, A et al. (2008) Intake of fruits and vegetables in relation to 10-year weight gain among Spanish adults. Obesity 16, 664670.Google Scholar
46. Willett, WC, Sacks, F, Trichopoulou, A et al. (1995) Mediterranean diet pyramid: a cultural model for healthy eating. Am J Clin Nutr 61, Suppl. 6, S1402S1406.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
47. Patel, S & Hu, FB (2008) Short sleep duration and weight gain: a systematic review. Obesity (Silver Spring) 16, 643653.Google Scholar
48. Cappuccio, FP, Taggart, FM, Kandala, NB et al. (2008) Meta-analysis of short sleep duration and obesity in children and adults. Sleep 31, 619626.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Table 1 Characteristics of cases and controls for matching or continuous variables: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

Figure 1

Table 2 Risk factors for childhood obesity from paediatrician's and family's questionnaires: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

Figure 2

Table 3 Risk factors for childhood obesity from family's questionnaire (semi-quantitative FFQ): OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008

Figure 3

Table 4 Multiple conditional logistic regression analysis of risk factors for childhood obesity: OBICE study, Spain, 2007–2008