Frontiers in Public Health (Jul 2023)

Socio-geographical disparities of obesity and excess weight in adults in Spain: insights from the ENE-COVID study

  • Enrique Gutiérrez-González,
  • Marta García-Solano,
  • Roberto Pastor-Barriuso,
  • Roberto Pastor-Barriuso,
  • Nerea Fernández de Larrea-Baz,
  • Nerea Fernández de Larrea-Baz,
  • Almudena Rollán-Gordo,
  • Belén Peñalver-Argüeso,
  • Belén Peñalver-Argüeso,
  • Isabel Peña-Rey,
  • Marina Pollán,
  • Marina Pollán,
  • Beatriz Pérez-Gómez,
  • Beatriz Pérez-Gómez,
  • the ENE-COVID Study Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpubh.2023.1195249
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundIn Spain, differences in the prevalence of obesity and excess weight according to sex and sociodemographic factors have been described at the national level, although current data do not allow to delve into geographical differences for these conditions. The aim was to estimate national and regional prevalences of adult obesity and excess weight in Spain by sex and sociodemographic characteristics, and to explore difference sources of inequalities in its distribution, as well as its geographical pattern.MethodENE-COVID study was a nationwide representative seroepidemiological survey with 57,131 participants. Residents in 35,893 households were selected from municipal rolls using a two-stage random sampling stratified by province and municipality size (April–June 2020). Participants (77.0% of contacted individuals) answered a questionnaire which collected self-reported weight and height, as well as different socioeconomic variables, that allowed estimating crude and standardized prevalences of adult obesity and excess weight.ResultsCrude prevalences of obesity and excess weight were higher in men (obesity: 19.3% vs. 18.0%; excess weight: 63.7% vs. 48.4%), while severe obesity was more prevalent in women (4.5% vs. 5.3%). These prevalences increased with age and disability, and decreased with education, census tract income and municipality size. Differences by educational level, relative census income, nationality or disability were clearly higher among women. Obesity by province ranged 13.3–27.4% in men and 11.4–28.1% in women; excess weight ranged 57.2–76.0% in men and 38.9–59.5% in women. The highest prevalences were located in the southern half of the country and some north-western provinces. Sociodemographic characteristics only explained a small part of the observed geographical variability (25.2% obesity).ConclusionObesity and overweight have a high prevalence in Spain, with notable geographical and sex differences. Socioeconomic inequalities are stronger among women. The observed geographical variability suggests the need to implement regional and local interventions to effectively address this public health problem.

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