Literature DB >> 15712786

Body image and attitude toward obesity in an historically black university.

Gilbert W Gipson1, Serena Reese, W Victor R Vieweg, Emmanuel A Anum, Anand K Pandurangi, Mary Ellen Olbrisch, Bela Sood, Joel J Silverman.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: The obesity epidemic is a major problem in the United States, particularly among black women. Body image and attitudes toward obesity are important areas to understand and address in any comprehensive approach to this epidemic.
METHODS: From an initial evaluation of 200 college students (25 male and 25 female freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors each) attending an historically black university, we selected those students who identified themselves as black for data analysis (n = 191). All students underwent height and weight measurement from which body mass index (BMI) was calculated. Each student answered two questions related to nine silhouettes for each sex that progressively moved from extreme thinness to extreme obesity. Also, each student answered 20 questions describing attitudes about obesity.
RESULTS: Black college students placed between the 62nd and 72nd percentiles of national BMI data for adolescents. Black female students were more likely than their black male counterparts to be obese. BMI did not vary by sex or grade level. Students of both sexes generally preferred "trim" silhouettes with the caveat that students with BMIs <25 kg/m2 preferred smaller silhouettes than did students with BMIs > or =25 kg/m2. BMI and sex did not favor any particular set of attitudes toward obesity.
CONCLUSION: Black male and female college students from an historically black university were largely in the "normal" range of BMI percentiles for sex and age. Our black female students were more likely to be obese than our black male students. Our findings suggest that young black women are tolerant of a variety of body sizes. Based on findings from our Attitudes Toward Obese Persons scale, body size sense of self and sex do not influence attitudes toward obese persons. Further studies are needed.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15712786      PMCID: PMC2568799     

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Natl Med Assoc        ISSN: 0027-9684            Impact factor:   1.798


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