Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet
<p>The objective of this study is to establish a causal relationship between the Mediterranean diet (MD) and various measures of overweightness using the Croatian Adult Health Survey 2003 data. Our results show that among three measures of obesity (body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) and...
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Franco Angeli
2021-01-01
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Online Access: | http://ojs.francoangeli.it/_ojs/index.php/ecagoa/article/view/11036 |
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doaj-d0f6be58e49a4b318a0e0dc55d85fd1a2021-02-23T16:06:12ZengFranco AngeliEconomia Agro-Alimentare1126-16681972-48022021-01-0122310.3280/ecag3-2020oa110364179Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean DietDanijel Nestić0Tomislav Vukina1Institute of Economics, ZagrebNorth Carolina State University<p>The objective of this study is to establish a causal relationship between the Mediterranean diet (MD) and various measures of overweightness using the Croatian Adult Health Survey 2003 data. Our results show that among three measures of obesity (body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) and obesity (BMI ≥ 30), we found statistically the most convincing relationship between the BMI and the MD. Our results show that an increase in the Mediterranean diet aggregate index by 10% reduces the BMI by about 0.9%. When the MD10 index is replaced with the set of its ten constituent food groups, as a group, these food variables are jointly statistically significant, most of them have expected (negative) signs, and some of them are also individually significant. For the other two overweight measurements (WHR and obesity) we found that the impact of MD aggregate index is insignificant but when the index is replaced by its ten constituent food elements, these are jointly statistically significant in explaining the variation in the obesity measures.</p>http://ojs.francoangeli.it/_ojs/index.php/ecagoa/article/view/11036mediterranean dietobesitytime effects peer effects |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Danijel Nestić Tomislav Vukina |
spellingShingle |
Danijel Nestić Tomislav Vukina Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet Economia Agro-Alimentare mediterranean diet obesity time effects peer effects |
author_facet |
Danijel Nestić Tomislav Vukina |
author_sort |
Danijel Nestić |
title |
Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet |
title_short |
Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet |
title_full |
Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet |
title_fullStr |
Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet |
title_full_unstemmed |
Examining the Prevalence of Obesity in Croatia: The Story of the Mediterranean Diet |
title_sort |
examining the prevalence of obesity in croatia: the story of the mediterranean diet |
publisher |
Franco Angeli |
series |
Economia Agro-Alimentare |
issn |
1126-1668 1972-4802 |
publishDate |
2021-01-01 |
description |
<p>The objective of this study is to establish a causal relationship between the Mediterranean diet (MD) and various measures of overweightness using the Croatian Adult Health Survey 2003 data. Our results show that among three measures of obesity (body mass index, waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) and obesity (BMI ≥ 30), we found statistically the most convincing relationship between the BMI and the MD. Our results show that an increase in the Mediterranean diet aggregate index by 10% reduces the BMI by about 0.9%. When the MD10 index is replaced with the set of its ten constituent food groups, as a group, these food variables are jointly statistically significant, most of them have expected (negative) signs, and some of them are also individually significant. For the other two overweight measurements (WHR and obesity) we found that the impact of MD aggregate index is insignificant but when the index is replaced by its ten constituent food elements, these are jointly statistically significant in explaining the variation in the obesity measures.</p> |
topic |
mediterranean diet obesity time effects peer effects |
url |
http://ojs.francoangeli.it/_ojs/index.php/ecagoa/article/view/11036 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT danijelnestic examiningtheprevalenceofobesityincroatiathestoryofthemediterraneandiet AT tomislavvukina examiningtheprevalenceofobesityincroatiathestoryofthemediterraneandiet |
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