| Literature DB >> 25393236 |
Karin Eli1, Kyndal Howell2, Philip A Fisher2, Paulina Nowicka3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parents' and grandparents' willingness to talk about children's body weights may be influenced by their own childhood experiences of body weight awareness and 'weight talk' in the family; however, little is known about how adults describe their recollected weight-related childhood experiences. AIMS: This paper examines how parents and grandparents of preschoolers describe the emergence of their own body weight awareness in childhood or adolescence. The analysis highlights the sources that participants identify as having instigated their body weight awareness, the feelings and experiences participants associate with the experience of becoming aware of their body weights, and their framings of potential links between childhood experiences and attitudes and practices in adulthood.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25393236 PMCID: PMC4230937 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0111974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Descriptive statistics of the sample.
| Children (n = 16) | Parents (n = 22) | Grandparents (n = 27) | |
|
| 4.6 (3.1–5.7) | 32. 2 (22.7–49.5) | 56.9 (43.0–77.9) |
|
| |||
| Female | 8 (50%) | 14 (64%) | 21 (78%) |
| Male | 8 (50%) | 8 (36%) | 6 (22%) |
|
| |||
| Euro-American/Caucasian | 11 (68%) | 21 (95%) | 23 (84%) |
| Native American | 0 | 1 (5%) | 0 |
| Asian | 0 | 0 | 1 (4%) |
| African-American | 0 | 0 | 1 (4%) |
| Mixed | 5 (32%) | 0 | 2 (8%) |
|
| 17.7 (14.3–21.5) | 26.8 (16.1–39.1) | 29.1 (16.1–49.4) |
|
| |||
| Underweight | 0 | 2 (9%) | 1 (3%) |
| Normal weight | 7 (44%) | 8 (36%) | 8 (30%) |
| Overweight | 4 (25%) | 6 (27%) | 10 (37%) |
| Obese | 5 (31%) | 6 (27%) | 8 (30%) |
|
| n/a | ||
| High school | 18 (82%) | 20 (74%) | |
| College/University | 4 (18%) | 7 (26%) | |
|
| n/a | ||
| Full time | 7 (32%) | 8 (30%) | |
| Part time | 4 (18%) | 4 (15%) | |
| Not employed | 11 (50%) | 15 (55%) | |
|
| n/a | ||
| Less than 14,999 USD | 8 (36%) | 7 (26%) | |
| 15,000–24,999 USD | 6 (27%) | 6 (22%) | |
| 25,000–39,999 USD | 4 (18%) | 6 (22%) | |
| More than 40, 000 USD | 4 (18%) | 8 (30%) |
*The main reasons for unemployment among parents were child care, pursuing higher education, and not finding work; among grandparents, unemployment was due to not finding work, reaching retirement age, or retiring due to health issues.