Abstract
Background
Childhood overweight and obesity represent one of the main public health problems in the world, but there is a scarcity of prevalence records in Brazil during the first year of life.
Objective
Verify the prevalence of overweight and obesity in the first year of life of infants enrolled in the Family Health Strategies, and to identify whether there is a difference in weight-per-age, height-per-age, weight/height-per-age and body mass index (BMI)-per-age in relation to sex, age group and socioeconomic level.
Method
A cross-sectional study was performed, in which weight and height data were collected from the Child Health Handbook.
Results
The prevalence of overweight and obesity was 7.2% according to the weight/height index, and 4.8% for the BMI index. Infants with an A-B socioeconomic status had higher BMI-per-age when compared to children at level C (p=0.048). Infants aged 6 to 12 months had higher weight-per-age (p=0.02) and height-per-age (p=0.01) than infants younger than six months.
Conclusion
The prevalence of overweight and obesity in the first year of life depends on the index used for classification. The socioeconomic status may interfere with BMI-per-age values, and the age group may interfere with weight-per-age and height-per-age indexes.
Keywords:
prevalence; pediatric obesity; body mass index; weight by height