Adult obesity prevalence at the county level in the United States, 2000–2010: Downscaling public health survey data using a spatial microsimulation approach

This study therefore, uses a spatial microsimulation approach to estimate obesity prevalence rates at the county level across the United States to visualize temporal, spatial and spatio-temporal changes from 2000 to 2010 for use in the monitoring of obesity prevalence. This method iteratively replicates the demographic characteristics of public health survey respondents with census data for those areas. Following, Local Moran's I was used to identify clusters of high and low obesity prevalence. The findings showed that obesity prevalence rose dramatically over the last decade with substantial variation across counties and states. Counties in Southern states, especially along the Mississippi River and Appalachian Mountains and counties containing or in proximity to Native American reservation sites showed elevated obesity prevalence rates across the decade. Counties in Midwestern states had higher obesity prevalence rates compared to counties in Western and Northeastern states. This study demonstrated the use of spatial microsimulation modeling as an alternative method to obtain reliable obesity prevalence rates at the local-level using existing health survey and census data.
Source: Spatial and Spatio-temporal Epidemiology - Category: Epidemiology Source Type: research