Background: We have previously shown that between 1980 and 2000,
age-adjusted mean body mass index (BMI) of urban Australian adults
increased by 1.4kg/m2 and 2.1kg/m2 for men and women,
respectively.1 The prevalence of obesity doubled to around 20%, while the
increasing right skew of the population BMI distribution resulted in a
four-fold increase in the prevalence of severe obesity.1 Obesity prevalence has
continued to increase in Australian adults, reaching 28% in 2012. The current study
aimed to quantify trends in BMI according to socioeconomic position (SEP) among
men and women from 1980 to 2007.
Methods: We compared data from the
1980, 1983 and 1989 National Heart Foundation Risk Factor Prevalence Survey
(RFPS), the 1995 National Nutrition Survey (NNS), the 2000 Australian Diabetes,
Obesity and Lifestyle Study (AusDiab), and the 2007 National Health Survey
(NHS). Analyses were restricted to residents from Australian capital cities
aged 25-64. BMI was calculated from measured height and weight and individual
level SEP was defined as having completed secondary school or not.
Results: Socioeconomic inequalities
were evident across all survey years for each age and sex strata according to
mean BMI, prevalence of obesity and mean BMI in the top fifth percentile of BMI
distribution. The
age standardised prevalence of obesity increased from 12% to 31% and 10% to 21%
between 1980 and 2007 for low and high SEP men, respectively. For women, the
prevalence of obesity increased from 12% to 28% and 7% to 18% for low and high
SEP groups, respectively.
Conclusions: Inequalities in BMI
have persisted in the Australian adult population since 1980 with no signs of
improvements, and a possible worsening in recent years. It is essential that
interventions to address the increasing trend of obesity have the dual goal of
improving population levels of weight and reducing its
associated disparities.