| Literature DB >> 22852762 |
Lucie Lemelin1, Frances Gallagher2, Jeannie Haggerty3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Childhood obesity is a public health epidemic. In Canada 21.5% of children aged 2-5 are overweight, with psychological and physical consequences for the child and economic consequences for society. Parents often do not view their children as overweight. One way to prevent overweight is to adopt a healthy lifestyle (HL). Nurses with direct access to young families could assess overweight and support parents in adopting HL. But what is the best way to support them if they do not view their child as overweight? A better understanding of parents' representation of children's overweight might guide the development of solutions tailored to their needs. METHODS/Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22852762 PMCID: PMC3489519 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6955-11-12
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Parental perception of child’s weight
| Bossink-Tuna et al. (2009) [ | Cross-sectional surveys | 635 | 87% of parents of overweight children disagreed that their child was overweight |
| Netherlands | | 2–4 | |
| Carnell et al. (2005) | Determine parents’ perceptions of their child’s weight compared to measured weight | 564 | 98.1% of parents of overweight children and 82.9% of parents of obese children did not perceive him/her as overweight |
| United Kingdom [ | | 3–5 | |
| Manios et al. (2009) | | 2287 | 55.4% of parents of overweight children and 88.0% of at-risk-of-overweight children perceived him/her as normal weight |
| Greece [ | | 2–5 | |
| Maynard et al. (2003) | | 5500 | 32.1% of mothers of overweight children reported that he/she was about the right weight |
| United States [ | | 2–11 | |
| Vuorela et al. (2010) | | 310 | 72.7% of parents of overweight boys and 93.8% of overweight girls classified them as normal weight |
| Finland [ | | 5 | |
| Wald et al. (2007) | | 612 | 82.5% of the parent of 3–5 years-old children their overweight children did not identify their child as overweight |
| United States [ | 3–12 |
Stages of the transtheoretical model
| Does not feel the need for change, denies the problem, has no interest in change | Evaluate self-confidence, discuss the pros and cons of the behavior to be changed | |
| Recognizes the problem, gathers information, does not take action | Raise awareness | |
| Decides to act, plans the change | Discuss the pros and cons, help and guide the individual in his/her approach, remind of past successes | |
| Applies new behavioral strategies | Discuss the pros and cons of the change and provide positive reinforcement | |
| Incorporates changes in own lifestyle | Positively reinforce desired behaviors, remind of successes and recognize danger signs | |
| Initial problem is no longer a temptation |