Table 3.
Breakfast consumer | ||
---|---|---|
Demographic and lifestyle variables | OR | 95 % CI |
Meets PA recommendations for age | ||
Yes | 1·19 | 0·83, 1·70 |
No | 1·00 | Referent |
Sex | ||
Female | 0·93 | 0·61, 1·41 |
Male | 1·00 | Referent |
Age (years) | ||
12–15 | 1·67 | 1·17, 2·39 |
16–19 | 1·00 | Referent |
Race/ethnicity | ||
Non-Hispanic white | 1·00 | Referent |
Non-Hispanic black | 0·57 | 0·39, 0·83 |
Hispanic | 1·15 | 0·78, 1·70 |
Other | 1·60 | 0·68, 3·75 |
Annual household income | ||
<$US 25 000 | 0·54 | 0·33, 0·88 |
$US 25 000–49 999 | 0·61 | 0·42, 0·88 |
≥$US 50 000 | 1·00 | Referent |
Household food security | ||
Full | 1·00 | Referent |
Marginal | 0·59 | 0·38, 0·92 |
Low | 0·62 | 0·38, 1·02 |
Very low | 0·68 | 0·39, 1·18 |
Education level of parent | ||
<High school | 0·89 | 0·68, 1·17 |
High school | 0·75 | 0·48, 1·17 |
>High school | 1·00 | Referent |
Missing | 1·2 | 0·40, 4·98 |
Education level of parent's spouse | ||
<High school | 1·07 | 0·63, 1·82 |
High school | 0·60 | 0·36, 0·98 |
>High school | 1·00 | Referent |
Missing | 0·54 | 0·32, 0·90 |
Marital status of parent | ||
Married | 1·00 | Referent |
Divorced/separated/widowed | 0·80 | 0·45, 1·42 |
Single | 0·44 | 0·25, 0·77 |
Living with partner | 0·76 | 0·32, 1·79 |
Missing | 0·28 | 0·10, 0·75 |
Tobacco/nicotine use in last 5 d | ||
Yes | 0·50 | 0·24, 1·03 |
No | 1·00 | Referent |
Missing | 1·09 | 0·41, 2·89 |
Receives school lunch | ||
Always (5 d/week) | 1·00 | 0·60, 1·68 |
Sometimes (1–4 d/week) | 0·69 | 0·36, 1·29 |
Never (0 d/week) | 1·00 | Referent |
Missing | 0·85 | 0·49, 1·47 |
Trying to lose weight? | ||
Yes | 0·94 | 0·58, 1·53 |
No | 1·00 | Referent |
Missing | 1·83 | 0·89, 3·76 |
BMI* | ||
Normal weight (<85th percentile) | 1·00 | Referent |
Overweight (85th–95th percentile) | 0·74 | 0·38, 1·42 |
Obese (≥95th percentile) | 0·79 | 0·52, 1·20 |
PA, physical activity; NHANES, National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.
*To determine weight status in children and adolescents aged 2–19 years, BMI was calculated by dividing weight in kilograms by the square of height in metres (kg/m2) and this number was then compared on a standardized growth chart. Children and adolescents who were at the 85th but below the 95th percentile were considered overweight; those at or above the 95th percentile were considered obese.