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The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s

Research output: Working paper

Published

Standard

The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s. / Brooks, Roger.
Lancaster University: The Department of Management Science, 2023. p. i - xxx, 1 - 300 (Management Science Working Paper Series; Vol. 2023, No. 1).

Research output: Working paper

Harvard

Brooks, R 2023 'The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s' Management Science Working Paper Series, no. 1, vol. 2023, The Department of Management Science, Lancaster University, pp. i - xxx, 1 - 300.

APA

Brooks, R. (2023). The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s. (pp. i - xxx, 1 - 300). (Management Science Working Paper Series; Vol. 2023, No. 1). The Department of Management Science.

Vancouver

Brooks R. The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s. Lancaster University: The Department of Management Science. 2023, p. i - xxx, 1 - 300. (Management Science Working Paper Series; 1).

Author

Brooks, Roger. / The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s. Lancaster University : The Department of Management Science, 2023. pp. i - xxx, 1 - 300 (Management Science Working Paper Series; 1).

Bibtex

@techreport{6ceefecb493845739109b5204c2be98d,
title = "The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s",
abstract = "Body mass index (BMI) data for men and for women of age 18 and over from the Health Survey for England (HSE) is analysed to investigate the changes in adult BMI in England since the early 1990s. A method is devised for producing estimated population BMI distributions, and these distributions give much more detailed information than just using the standard BMI categories. Topics include the changes in BMI over time, how BMI varies with age, a model for producing BMI scenarios, calorie values for the BMI changes, and how BMI varies across different categories of deprivation. General findings include: the way that BMI has increased over time is approximately a linear scaling transformation, which means that BMI has increased much more for those with a higher BMI than those with a lower BMI; BMI increased at a faster rate in the 1990s than since then; the BMI distributions for men and women are very different, but have increased in a similar way over time; within narrow birth cohorts, mean BMI tends to increase with age for all ages with the fastest rate of increase being for the youngest ages; the age 18 distributions are very similar for men and women and are the lowest BMI values with about two thirds in the healthy BMI category; the BMI distribution increases with age in different ways for men and women; model scenarios were able to be produced for the continuation of current conditions and for returning to the lower BMI levels of the early 1990s; the increases in daily calorie amounts calculated for the BMI changes using models from the literature are quite small; BMI tends to be higher for categories of greater deprivation with the differences being particularly large for the data for women.",
keywords = "body mass index, obesity, Health Survey for England, adults, aging, statistics, modelling, calories, deprivation",
author = "Roger Brooks",
year = "2023",
language = "English",
series = "Management Science Working Paper Series",
publisher = "The Department of Management Science",
number = "1",
pages = "i -- xxx, 1 -- 300",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "The Department of Management Science",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s

AU - Brooks, Roger

PY - 2023

Y1 - 2023

N2 - Body mass index (BMI) data for men and for women of age 18 and over from the Health Survey for England (HSE) is analysed to investigate the changes in adult BMI in England since the early 1990s. A method is devised for producing estimated population BMI distributions, and these distributions give much more detailed information than just using the standard BMI categories. Topics include the changes in BMI over time, how BMI varies with age, a model for producing BMI scenarios, calorie values for the BMI changes, and how BMI varies across different categories of deprivation. General findings include: the way that BMI has increased over time is approximately a linear scaling transformation, which means that BMI has increased much more for those with a higher BMI than those with a lower BMI; BMI increased at a faster rate in the 1990s than since then; the BMI distributions for men and women are very different, but have increased in a similar way over time; within narrow birth cohorts, mean BMI tends to increase with age for all ages with the fastest rate of increase being for the youngest ages; the age 18 distributions are very similar for men and women and are the lowest BMI values with about two thirds in the healthy BMI category; the BMI distribution increases with age in different ways for men and women; model scenarios were able to be produced for the continuation of current conditions and for returning to the lower BMI levels of the early 1990s; the increases in daily calorie amounts calculated for the BMI changes using models from the literature are quite small; BMI tends to be higher for categories of greater deprivation with the differences being particularly large for the data for women.

AB - Body mass index (BMI) data for men and for women of age 18 and over from the Health Survey for England (HSE) is analysed to investigate the changes in adult BMI in England since the early 1990s. A method is devised for producing estimated population BMI distributions, and these distributions give much more detailed information than just using the standard BMI categories. Topics include the changes in BMI over time, how BMI varies with age, a model for producing BMI scenarios, calorie values for the BMI changes, and how BMI varies across different categories of deprivation. General findings include: the way that BMI has increased over time is approximately a linear scaling transformation, which means that BMI has increased much more for those with a higher BMI than those with a lower BMI; BMI increased at a faster rate in the 1990s than since then; the BMI distributions for men and women are very different, but have increased in a similar way over time; within narrow birth cohorts, mean BMI tends to increase with age for all ages with the fastest rate of increase being for the youngest ages; the age 18 distributions are very similar for men and women and are the lowest BMI values with about two thirds in the healthy BMI category; the BMI distribution increases with age in different ways for men and women; model scenarios were able to be produced for the continuation of current conditions and for returning to the lower BMI levels of the early 1990s; the increases in daily calorie amounts calculated for the BMI changes using models from the literature are quite small; BMI tends to be higher for categories of greater deprivation with the differences being particularly large for the data for women.

KW - body mass index

KW - obesity

KW - Health Survey for England

KW - adults

KW - aging

KW - statistics

KW - modelling

KW - calories

KW - deprivation

M3 - Working paper

T3 - Management Science Working Paper Series

SP - i - xxx, 1 - 300

BT - The changes in BMI and obesity prevalence for adults in England since the early 1990s

PB - The Department of Management Science

CY - Lancaster University

ER -