Close X
Wednesday, December 25, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Did You Know Your Height And Weight May Affect Income?

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 Mar, 2016 11:24 AM
    Men who are shorter in height and women who are obese are more likely to be socio-economically deprived with lower levels of education, occupation, and income, suggests new research.
     
    "These data support evidence that height and BMI play an important partial role in determining several aspects of a person's socio-economic status, especially women's BMI (body mass index) for income and deprivation and men's height for education, income, and job class," said lead researcher Timothy Frayling, professor at University of Exeter in Britain.
     
    The findings were reported in the journal BMJ.
     
    The researchers tested whether genetic variants influencing height or BMI play a direct (causal) role in socio-economic status.
     
    They analysed genetic variants with known effects on height and body mass index from 119,000 individuals aged between 40 and 70 in the Britain's Biobank -- a database of biological information from half a million British adults -- using a technique called Mendelian randomisation.
     
     
    Five measures of socio-economic status were assessed -- age at the time of completing schooling, degree level education, job class, annual household income, and Townsend deprivation index (a recognised social deprivation score).
     
    Analyses were repeated separately for men and women, the researchers maintained.
     
    "These findings have important social and health implications, supporting evidence that overweight people, especially women, are at a disadvantage and that taller people, especially men, are at an advantage," the researchers concluded.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too
    The findings showed that a number of legal sexual interests and behaviours considered anomalous are actually common in the general population. 

    Strong Sexual Desires Common Among Women Too

    Women Experience More Neck Pain Than Men

    Women Experience More Neck Pain Than Men
    Shedding new light on how differently men and women experience pain, researchers, including one of Indian-origin, have found that women are 1.38 times more likely than men to report neck pain due to cervical degenerative disc disease.

    Women Experience More Neck Pain Than Men

    A Moment Of Firsts, As Justin Trudeau Arrives In The U.S. Today

    Trudeau today begins his first prime ministerial visit to the U.S. — which will also feature the first White House state dinner for a Canadian in 19 years.

    A Moment Of Firsts, As Justin Trudeau Arrives In The U.S. Today

    WHO: Sexual Transmission Of Zika More Common Than Thought

    WHO: Sexual Transmission Of Zika More Common Than Thought
    Sexual transmission of the Zika virus is more common than previously thought, the World Health Organization said Tuesday, citing reports from several countries.

    WHO: Sexual Transmission Of Zika More Common Than Thought

    New Guidelines Back CT Scans For Lung Cancer Screening In Longtime Smoke

    New Guidelines Back CT Scans For Lung Cancer Screening In Longtime Smoke
    The guidelines from the Canadian Task Force on Preventive Health Care apply to current smokers and those who have quit within the past 15 years with at least a so-called 30 pack-year history of smoking

    New Guidelines Back CT Scans For Lung Cancer Screening In Longtime Smoke

    U.K. Company's 'Period Policy' Ignites Discussion About Menstrual Leave

    U.K. Company's 'Period Policy' Ignites Discussion About Menstrual Leave
    Sick days are standard in most organizations, but a British company may soon allow its female employees leave to cope with a specific ailment: period pain.

    U.K. Company's 'Period Policy' Ignites Discussion About Menstrual Leave

    PrevNext