Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas

Shifts in lifestyles and eating patterns have led to an increasing prevalence of chronic non-communicable diseases in the adult population in Mongolia. This article reports the prevalence of obesity, abdominal obesity and body fat among 408 Mongolian adults aged 25 years and above. The subjects incl...

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Main Authors: Dugee, Otgontuya, Khor, Geok Lin, Mohd Esa, Norhaizan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nutrition Society of Malaysia 2009
Online Access:http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/1/Obesity%20among%20Mongolian%20adults%20from%20urban%20and%20rural%20areas.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/
http://nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0015_2/mjn15n2_art7.php
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spelling my.upm.eprints.136972018-07-06T09:19:25Z http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/ Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas Dugee, Otgontuya Khor, Geok Lin Mohd Esa, Norhaizan Shifts in lifestyles and eating patterns have led to an increasing prevalence of chronic non-communicable diseases in the adult population in Mongolia. This article reports the prevalence of obesity, abdominal obesity and body fat among 408 Mongolian adults aged 25 years and above. The subjects included 61.2% from urban areas and 38.8% from rural areas, reflective of the 60: 40 urban rural ratio in the general population. Anthropometric measurements were taken according to standard methods. Classification of overweight/obesity was based on body mass index of WHO while abdominal obesity was based on WPRO for Asians. Men made up 47.8% (200) and women 52.2% (218) of the sample. The mean age of the subjects was 46.7±12.7 years. About one-third (32.8%) of the subjects were overweight and 10.5% obese. A higher proportion of women (13.3%) than men were obese (7.5%). The age groups of 35-54 years in men and 55-64 years in women showed the highest prevalence of overweight. Prevalence of abdominal obesity was found in 46.5% of the men and in 65.1% of the women. Women aged 55-64 years had the highest proportion (78.4%) of abdominal obesity. In terms of body fat, 20.0 % and 51.5% of the men had high and very high levels of body fat respectively, while among the women, 15.1% and 55.5% respectively had high and very high levels of body fat. Mongolian adults face serious risk of cardiovascular diseases and other aspects of ill-health brought about by obesity. Prevention and control of obesity should be targeted as an urgent public health agenda in Mongolia. Nutrition Society of Malaysia 2009 Article PeerReviewed text en http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/1/Obesity%20among%20Mongolian%20adults%20from%20urban%20and%20rural%20areas.pdf Dugee, Otgontuya and Khor, Geok Lin and Mohd Esa, Norhaizan (2009) Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas. Malaysian Journal of Nutrition, 15 (2). pp. 185-194. ISSN 1394-035X http://nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0015_2/mjn15n2_art7.php
institution Universiti Putra Malaysia
building UPM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Putra Malaysia
content_source UPM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://psasir.upm.edu.my/
language English
description Shifts in lifestyles and eating patterns have led to an increasing prevalence of chronic non-communicable diseases in the adult population in Mongolia. This article reports the prevalence of obesity, abdominal obesity and body fat among 408 Mongolian adults aged 25 years and above. The subjects included 61.2% from urban areas and 38.8% from rural areas, reflective of the 60: 40 urban rural ratio in the general population. Anthropometric measurements were taken according to standard methods. Classification of overweight/obesity was based on body mass index of WHO while abdominal obesity was based on WPRO for Asians. Men made up 47.8% (200) and women 52.2% (218) of the sample. The mean age of the subjects was 46.7±12.7 years. About one-third (32.8%) of the subjects were overweight and 10.5% obese. A higher proportion of women (13.3%) than men were obese (7.5%). The age groups of 35-54 years in men and 55-64 years in women showed the highest prevalence of overweight. Prevalence of abdominal obesity was found in 46.5% of the men and in 65.1% of the women. Women aged 55-64 years had the highest proportion (78.4%) of abdominal obesity. In terms of body fat, 20.0 % and 51.5% of the men had high and very high levels of body fat respectively, while among the women, 15.1% and 55.5% respectively had high and very high levels of body fat. Mongolian adults face serious risk of cardiovascular diseases and other aspects of ill-health brought about by obesity. Prevention and control of obesity should be targeted as an urgent public health agenda in Mongolia.
format Article
author Dugee, Otgontuya
Khor, Geok Lin
Mohd Esa, Norhaizan
spellingShingle Dugee, Otgontuya
Khor, Geok Lin
Mohd Esa, Norhaizan
Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
author_facet Dugee, Otgontuya
Khor, Geok Lin
Mohd Esa, Norhaizan
author_sort Dugee, Otgontuya
title Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
title_short Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
title_full Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
title_fullStr Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
title_full_unstemmed Obesity among Mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
title_sort obesity among mongolian adults from urban and rural areas
publisher Nutrition Society of Malaysia
publishDate 2009
url http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/1/Obesity%20among%20Mongolian%20adults%20from%20urban%20and%20rural%20areas.pdf
http://psasir.upm.edu.my/id/eprint/13697/
http://nutriweb.org.my/publications/mjn0015_2/mjn15n2_art7.php
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score 13.211869