Abstract
Purpose:
We hypothesized that living with a smoker would be positively associated with general and central adiposity among middle-aged and older women.
Design:
Prospective across up to 8 years.
Setting:
Women’s Health Initiative Observational Study.
Sample:
A total of 83 492 women (age 50-79 at baseline).
Measures:
The predictor was living with a smoker at baseline. Outcomes were clinic-assessed obesity and high waist circumference, examined cross-sectionally at baseline and prospectively at year 3 and (for self-reported obesity) year 8.
Analysis:
All analyses used logistic regression and controlled for sociodemographic factors and participants’ current smoking; prospective analyses also adjusted for baseline obesity or high waist circumference.
Results:
Living with a smoker was associated (1) cross-sectionally with obesity (n = 82 692, odds ratio [OR] = 1.38, P < .001) and a high waist circumference (n = 83 241, OR = 1.41, P < .001) and (2) prospectively with obesity (n = 68 753, OR = 1.22, P < .001) and a high waist circumference (n = 68 947, OR = 1.22, P < .001) 3 years later and obesity (n = 38 212, OR = 1.21, P < .001) 8 years later.
Conclusion:
These results document an essentially unrecognized health risk associated with living with a smoker. For practitioners, these findings underscore the need for innovative household-level interventions for families living with a smoker integrating established smoking and obesity prevention efforts.
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