| Literature DB >> 27881930 |
Jean Rankin1, Lynsay Matthews2, Stephen Cobley3, Ahreum Han3, Ross Sanders3, Huw D Wiltshire4, Julien S Baker5.
Abstract
Childhood obesity is one of the most serious public health challenges of the 21st century with far-reaching and enduring adverse consequences for health outcomes. Over 42 million children <5 years worldwide are estimated to be overweight (OW) or obese (OB), and if current trends continue, then an estimated 70 million children will be OW or OB by 2025. The purpose of this review was to focus on psychiatric, psychological, and psychosocial consequences of childhood obesity (OBy) to include a broad range of international studies. The aim was to establish what has recently changed in relation to the common psychological consequences associated with childhood OBy. A systematic search was conducted in MEDLINE, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library for articles presenting information on the identification or prevention of psychiatric morbidity in childhood obesity. Relevant data were extracted and narratively reviewed. Findings established childhood OW/OBy was negatively associated with psychological comorbidities, such as depression, poorer perceived lower scores on health-related quality of life, emotional and behavioral disorders, and self-esteem during childhood. Evidence related to the association between attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and OBy remains unconvincing because of various findings from studies. OW children were more likely to experience multiple associated psychosocial problems than their healthy-weight peers, which may be adversely influenced by OBy stigma, teasing, and bullying. OBy stigma, teasing, and bullying are pervasive and can have serious consequences for emotional and physical health and performance. It remains unclear as to whether psychiatric disorders and psychological problems are a cause or a consequence of childhood obesity or whether common factors promote both obesity and psychiatric disturbances in susceptible children and adolescents. A cohesive and strategic approach to tackle this current obesity epidemic is necessary to combat this increasing trend which is compromising the health and well-being of the young generation and seriously impinging on resources and economic costs.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; anxiety; bullying; depression; mental health; obesity stigma; pediatric obesity; psychological comorbidity; teasing
Year: 2016 PMID: 27881930 PMCID: PMC5115694 DOI: 10.2147/AHMT.S101631
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adolesc Health Med Ther ISSN: 1179-318X
Global incidence of overweight and obesity in childhood
| • Of the 42 million overweight children worldwide, ~31 million live in developing countries |
| • In the United States, childhood obesity incidence has more than doubled in children and quadrupled in adolescents in the past 30 years. One-third of the US children/adolescents in the general population are currently overweight/obese |
| • Overweight/obesity in children aged 11–13 years across 36 countries in WHO European region ranges from 5% to >25% |
| • Australia, with the sixth highest prevalence of the population being overweight or obese among OECD countries |
| • In the last 25 years, the number of overweight or obese children living in the African continent has surged from 5.4 million to 10.3 million. This means 25% of all overweight or obese preschool age children live in the WHO African regions |
Abbreviations: OECD, Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development; WHO, World Health Organization.
Complete list of search terms
| (childhood obesity or pediatric obesity or obese children or obese child) and (comorbidity or comorbidities or co-morbidity or co-morbidities) and (identification or diagnosis) and (prevention or treatment or treatments or therapy or therapies or intervention or interventions) and (psychiatric or psychological or cognitherapy or cognitive behavio?r therapy or motivational enhancement or antipsychotics or body image or body image disturbance or body dissatisfaction or body shape discontent or self-esteem or depression or anxiety or disordered eating or weight stigmatization or weight bias or bullying or stress or cognitive impairment or attention-deficit disorder or low health-related quality of life or self-perception or long-term effects or school performance) |
Figure 1PRISMA flow diagram of search results.
Abbreviation: PRISMA, Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses.
Summary of depression and anxiety papers (by authors in alphabetical order) (n=16)
| Authors | Year | Study design | Age (years) | n | Population | Key measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson et al | 2006 | Prospective longitudinal 4 Waves between 1975 and 2003 | Wave1: 9–18 | 776 | Community-based, US | BMI z-scores (age-sex centiles-CDCAP). DSM-III children/DSM-IV: anxiety/depressive disorders | Anxiety/depression were only associated with higher BMI z-scores in females |
| Anderson et al | 2007 | Prospective longitudinal 1983, 1985, 2003 | 12–17.99 | 701 | Community-based, US | BMI-OB (age-sex centiles-CDCAP) | Females OB as adolescents possible at increased risk for depression or anxiety disorders |
| Anton et al | 2006 | Cross-sectional | 11–13 | 45 | Sixth-grade students, US | BMI OB (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) | Specific aspects of depression (ie, interpersonal problems/feelings of ineffectiveness) positively correlated with increased sedentary activity |
| Bell et al | 2011 | Cross-sectional | 6–13 | 283 | GAD (Growth and Development Study) | BMI z-scores (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) | Increased psychological symptoms reported in OW/OB individuals |
| Bell et al | 2007 | Cross-sectional Part of prospective “Growth and Development” (GAD) study | 6–13 | 177 | OW/OB children seeking treatment | BMI z-scores (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) Structured medical interview: psychosocial symptoms, depression, anxiety + bullying | Increased depression with increased BMI z-score |
| Bjornelv et al | 2011 | Population-longitudinal | 13–18 | 8,090 | Young-HUNT-1 | BMI (international age/sex specific cutoffs) | No sex differences: in psychological factors/weight problems |
| Eschenbeck et al | 2009 | Community-based | 6–14 | 156,948 | German national health insurance data | ICD-10: physician diagnosis of OB/psychiatric disorders (ie, external, eg, ADHD, conduct issues; internal, eg, depression/anxiety) | OB significantly associated external and internal disorders |
| Gibson et al | 2008 | Cross-sectional | 8–13 | 262 | Population-based: | BMIz-scores, (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) | Increased BMI z-score associated with increasing levels of psychosocial distress significantly correlated with depression Interaction between increased BMI z-score and gender - girls having a significantly stronger increase in depression than boys |
| Goldstein et al | 2008 | Clinical-cohort | 7–17 | 348 | Diagnosed (bipolar disorder, BP), US | BMI (IOTF criteria). | OW/OB adolescents with BP: |
| Hoare et al | 2014 | Cross-sectional | 11–14 | 800 | Schoolchildren, Australia | BMI (WHO criteria). Behaviors: | Higher odds of depressive symptoms in OW/OB males before/after adjusting for covariates (than normal-weight adolescents) PA did not show any association with OW/OB |
| Koch et al | 2008 | Cross-sectional/longitudinal | 1 (n=11,082) | n=5,221 (at all age-points) | Swedish families All babies in Southeast Sweden project (ABIS) | BMI: obese/non-obese (IOTF criteria). | Children reporting stress (≥2 domains) have significantly higher OR for OB (cross-sectional and longitudinal) |
| Marks et al | 2009 | Retrospective medical record review | 4–21 | 230 | Individuals (psychiatric consultation), US | BMI (CNRC guidelines). | OW/OB children: |
| Phillips et al | 2012 | Cohort | 6–17 | 249 | OB youths treatment clinic, US | BMI (age-sex centiles-CDCAP). | Extremely OB youth – higher rates across all psychosocial variables with poorer QoL OB girls scored worse than OB boys only on social anxiety (SAS) |
| Roth et al | 2008 | Family-based behavioral/treatment | 8–12 | 59 | Clinical referral OB mother + children, Switzerland | BMI (IOTF criteria) | OB children (clinical sample): |
| Sanderson et al | 2011 | Cohort: | 7–15 | 2,243 | National Australian School survey | BMI z-scores (age/sex specific ≥85th | OW/OB in childhood associated with increased risk of diagnosed mood disorder (adulthood, OW girls becoming OB women) |
| van Wijnen et al | 2010 | Population-based | 13–14/15–16 | 21,730 | Dutch Schoolchildren | BMI (self-reported only)– (IOTF criteria) Internet questionnaire: MHI-5 | OB boys/girls more likely to be psychologically unhealthy/reported more suicide attempts/thoughts |
Note: Refer to Table 6 for abbreviations and outcome measures.
Summary of ADHD papers included in the review (by authors in alphabetical order) (n= 17)
| Authors | Year | Study design | Age (years) | n | Population | Key measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anderson et al | 2010 | Longitudinal | 2–12 | 1,237 | Child/youth development (SECCYD) | BMI (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) | Externalizing behaviors problems associated with higher BMI and OB (as young as 24 months) |
| Anderson et al | 2006 | Prospective/longitudinal | T1 : ~9–16 | 655 | General population (childhood-adulthood) | BMI z-scores (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) Diagnosis DISC-IV for children for ADHD, defiant disorder/conduct disorder | Subjects with ADHD have higher mean BMI z-scores (all ages) compared with subjects with no disruptive disorder Disruptive disorders associated with elevated weight-status (childhood into adulthood) |
| Byrd et al | 2013 | Survey (cohort: 2001–2004) | 8–15 | 3,050 | US children | BMI (≥percentile of US reference) | Males (medication) had lower odds of OB than males without ADHD |
| Cortese et al | 2007 | Cross-sectional | 12–17 | 99 | Severely OB adolescents, France | OW >97th percentile (national BMI charts) | OB significantly associated (ADHD) symptoms (after controlling for depressive/anxiety) ADHD symptom/bulimic behaviors associated in OB adolescents may be accounted for by impulsivity/inattention rather than hyperactivity |
| Duarte et al | 2010 | Prospective/population-based (national) Recruited – R Assessed – A | R: 8 | 2,209 | Military examination records, boys, Finland | BMI (military records). Child mental health (8 years) assessed through 3 sources: parents, teachers, and children | Childhood conduct problems (disobedience/defiance/aggression/cruelty to others/stealing/lying/destruction of property) prospectively associated with OW/OB young adults |
| Dubnov-Raz et al | 2011 | Cross-sectional Medical records analysis | 6–16 | 275 | Diagnosed ADHD treated (methylphenidate, per guidelines) with no neurological comorbidities, confirmed healthy controls, Israel | BMI, z-scores (OW as ≥85th percentile, OB as ≥95th percentile growth charts, CDCAP) | OW/OB prevalence was lower in ADHD-treated group compared with healthy controls, similar to national estimates Methylphenidate treatment did not significantly alter OW status |
| Erhart et al | 2012 | Cross-sectional/community-based survey | 11–17 | 2,863 | German parents/children | BMI (national age/sex-specific referencevalues) | Rate of ADHD significantly higher for OB than normal/UW children. OW/OB children 2× likely for ADHD diagnosis |
| Graziano et al | 2012 | Cohort | 4.5–18 | 80 | ADHD (diagnosed and clinical confirmation), hospital clinic, US | BMI, z-scores (age-sex centiles-CDCAP) | Children (ADHD): |
| Khalife et al | 2014 | Prospective/Postal/questionnaire | 7–8 | 8,106 | 1986 birth-cohort, Finland | BMI (OB defined, IOTF cutoff points) | Children (ADHD/CD symptom) increased risk of OB and physically inactive adolescents |
| Kim et al | 2011 | Cross-sectional national survey | 6–17 | 66,707 | US children | BMI (as ≥95th percentile growth charts, CDCAP) | OB prevalence higher among children with ADHD |
| 2009 | Retrospective medical record review | 4–21 | 230 | Individuals (psychiatric consultation), US | BMI (CNRC guidelines) | OW/OB children | |
| Pauli-Pott et al | 2014 | Documentary analysis | 6–12 | 360 | ADHD, ODD, CD, or adjustment disorder (n=257) and control group with adjustment disorder (n=103), Germany | BMI (OB classified ≥97th percentile national reference data) | Nonsignificant links between ADHD/BMI-SDS or obesity |
| Racicka et al | 2015 | Documentary analysis | 7–18 | 408 | ADHD patients, Poland | BMI (age/sex-growth references, Polish population) | Significantly higher frequency of OW/OB patients with |
| Rojo et al | 2006 | Community study | 13–15 | 35,403 | Obese adolescents | Self-reported (study limitation): | Slight increase only in comorbidity of ADHD characteristics in OB adolescents |
| Waring et al | 2008 | Cross-sectional national survey | 5–17 | 62,887 | ADHD (2004 national child health survey– using SLAITS), US | BMI (defined percentile growth charts, CDCAP) | Children (ADHD) not using medication had 1.5× odds of being OW |
| White et al | 2012 | Cohort-secondary analysis | 5/10/30 | > 12,400 | UK, 1970s/birth-cohort study | BMI (UK standards) | General psychological problems consistently associated in childhood particularly hyperactivity and attention problem with adult OB |
| Yang et al | 2013 | Cohort | 6–16 | 158 | ADHD children (meeting DSM-IV criteria), People's Republic of China | BMI, z-scores (NGRCCA) | Increased incidence of OB children with ADHD (higher in general population) |
Notes: Refer to Table 6 for abbreviations and outcome measures.
Also cited in Table 3.
Summary of papers included in the review related to self-esteem, HRQoL, conduct, stigmatization, and eating disorders (by authors in alphabetical order) (n = 30)
| Authors | Year | Study design | Age (years) | n | Population | Key measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2011 | Cross-sectional | 6–13 | 283 | Growth and Development (GAD) Study | BMI, z-score (age-sex centiles, CDCAP) Structured medical interview: psychosocial symptoms, depression, anxiety + bullying | OW/OB individuals: | |
| 2007 | Cross-sectional Part of prospective GAD study | 6–13 | 177 | OW/OB children seeking-treatment | BMI, z-score (age-sex centiles, CDCAP) Structured medical interview: psychosocial symptoms, depression, anxiety + bullying | Increasing BMI, z-scores: | |
| 2011 | Population, longitudinal | 13–18 | 8,090 | Young-HUNT-1 | BMI (international age/sex-specific cutoffs) Physical/mental health questionnaire: eating problems, self-esteem, personality, anxiety/depression | No sex differences: in psychological factors/weight problems | |
| Bolton et al | 2014 | Cohort | 11–19.6 | 1,583 | Schoolchildren, Victoria, Australia | BMI (WHO reference data) | Lower HRQoL: |
| 2010 | Prospective/population-based (national) | R: 8 | 2,209 | Military examination records, boys, Finland | BMI (military records). Child mental health (8 years) assessed through 3 sources: parents, teachers, and children Parent-teacher: psychopathy using Rutter scale for: conduct, hyperkinetic (related to hyperactivity, inattentive behavior, etc) and emotional domains CDI (self-report): depression | Childhood conduct problems (disobedience/defiance/aggression/cruelty to others/stealing/lying/and destruction of property) prospectively associated with OW/OB young adults | |
| 2009 | Community-based | 6–14 | 156,948 | German national health insurance data | ICD-10: physician diagnosis of OB/psychiatric disorders (ie, external, eg, ADHD, conduct issues; internal, eg, depression/anxiety) | OB significantly associated external and internal disorders | |
| Franklin et al | 2006 | Cross-sectional | 9–13 | 2,749 | Schoolchildren (Australia) | Height/weight (BMI) | OW/OB children reported significantly poorer physical appearance, global self-worth |
| Gerke et al | 2013 | Cohort | 11–17 | 92 | OB African-Americans seeking treatment (TEENS) | Personal/family information: | Daily hassles, teasing, upset about teasing, depressive symptoms and self-esteem were all significantly correlated with eating pathology |
| 2008 | Cross-sectional | 8–13 | 262 | Population-based: | BMI (z-scores), (age-sex centiles, CDCAP). | Increase BMI z-score associated with increasing levels of psychosocial distress significantly correlated with depression | |
| Guerdijkova et al | 2007 | Medical documentary analysis | <18 | 44 | Child/adult weight-management program, US 113 including 69 OB adults | BMI (NIH guidelines), weight history | Irrespective of age, very high prevalence rates of mood disorders |
| Halfon et al | 2013 | Cross-sectional | 10–17 | 41,976–43,297 | Population-based, US | BMI (%age/sex 85th to <95th; ≥95th percentiles) | OW/OB associated with poorer health status, lower emotional functioning, and school-related problems |
| Jansen et al | 2013 | Cross-sectional Longitudinal | Wave1: 4–5 | 3,898 | Australian children | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) | High BMI, related to poorer HRQoL in late childhood Unique findings, this emerges in 6–7 years |
| Johnston et al | 2011 | Clinical evaluation trial | 6–18 | 48 | Treatment-seeking cohort: OB children, 10-week weight loss program + parent/s, US | BMI (age-sex centiles, CDCAP) Parental report | Overall, significant reduction in BMI z-score: especially severely obese and children with comorbidity |
| 2014 | Prospective/postal/questionnaire | 7–8 | 8,106 | 1986 birth-cohort, Finland | BMI (OB defined, IOTF cutoff points) | Children with ADHD/CD symptoms, increased risk of OB and physically inactive adolescents | |
| Lebow et al | 2015 | Retrospective-cohort | 10–20 | 179 | OW/OB treatment-seeking adolescents (diagnosed restrictive-eating disorders) | BMI (age-sex centiles, CDCAP). | 36% adolescents (for treatment for a restrictive-eating disorder) had weight history >85th BMI percentile |
| Madowitz et al | 2012 | Cohort | 8–12 | 79 | Obese parent–child pairs referred to family-based treatment | BMI | OB children: |
| 2009 | Retrospective medical record – review | 4–21 | 230 | Individuals (psychiatric consultation), US | BMI (CNRC guidelines). | OW/OB children: | |
| Neumark-Sztainer et al | 2007 | Longitudinal, survey | Mean age:-12.8 (T1: 1999), 17.2 (T2: 2004) | 2,516 | Adolescents (project EAT) | Weight status: (guidelines for cutoff criteria) | Weight-specific socio-environmental, personal, and behavioral variables are strong and consistent predictors of OW status, binge eating/extreme weight-control behaviors in adolescence |
| 2012 | Cohort | 6–17 | 249 | OB youths, treatment clinic, US | BMI (age–sex centiles–CDCAP) | Extremely OB youth, higher rates across all psychosocial variables with poorer QoL | |
| Quinlan et al | 2009 | Cohort study | 12–18 | 96 | Longitudinal weight loss program over summer camp, US | BMI (national cutoff criteria) | More frequent and upsetting weight-related teasing experiences associated with worse psychological functioning |
| Sawyer et al | 2011 | Cohort | 4–5 | 3,363 | Longitudinal study of Australian children | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) Mental health: | >BMI in 4–5 years higher – likelihood of peer problems/teacher reports of emotional issues (8–9 years) |
| Sawyer et al | 2006 | Cross-sectional | 4–5 | 4,983 | Longitudinal study of Australian children Random assignment | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) Mental health | OB children had more peer/conduct problems |
| Taner et al | 2009 | Cross-sectional | 7–16 | 54 | Obese children, Turkey | Diagnosed OB | 50% children/adolescents had comorbid psychiatric disorders |
| Taylor et al | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 7–11 | 158 | Primary children, Australia (and primary caregiver) | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) | Increasing BMI negatively associated with self-esteem Child weight associated with negative psychological outcomes in young, non-treatment-seeking children Larger BMI negatively associated with child self-esteem and positively associated with child body dissatisfaction Parental responsiveness positively associated with child self-esteem |
| Wake et al | 2013 | Cross-sectional/longitudinal | 2–3 | 4,606 | Two Australian populations HOYVS 2000–2006 | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) | Normal weight deviations associated with health differences (vary by morbidity/age) |
| Wake et al | 2010 | Cross-sectional | 8.4–15.8 | 923/parents | HOYVS (1997, 2000, 2005): n=24 | BMI (IOTF cutoff points) | OW/OB adolescents more likely to have poorer health/but not more likely to report specific health issues Morbidity mainly associated with concurrent rather than earlier OW/OB |
| Walders-Abramson et al | 2013 | Cohort | 11–18 | 166 | OB adolescents ≥95th percentile for age/sex (+1 or more metabolic syndrome), endocrinology clinic, US | BMI percentiles (using 99th percentile, extreme/morbid OB) | Meet criteria for extreme OB alone were more predictive of psychological difficulties |
| Wille et al | 2010 | Multicentre, clinical | 8–16 | 1,916 | OW/OB children seeking treatment (patients) (Germany) | BMI (national standards, Germany age/sex-specific >90th percentile or >97th). | Presence of differences in HRQoL regarding sex, age, treatment modality, and treatment-seeking OW/OB patients |
| Zeller et al | 2006 | Retrospective analysis, clinical data | 10–18 | 33 | Extremely morbidly obese (seeking treatment/bariatric surgery) | Child: | Daily life for extreme OB adolescents (seeking treatment) is globally and severely impaired |
| Zeller & Modi 2006 | 2006 | Clinical cohort | 8–18 | 166 obese youth | 70% females, 57% African-American pediatric weight management program | BMI (≥95th percentile) | HRQoL scores impaired relative to published norms on healthy youth (P<0.001) |
Notes: Refer to Table 6 for abbreviations and outcome measures.
Also cited in Table 3.
Also cited in Tables 3 and 4.
List of abbreviations and outcome measures cited in Tables 3–5
| ABAKQ | Adolescent Behaviours, Attitudes, and Knowledge Questionnaire |
| ADHD | Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder |
| AQoL-6D | Assessment of Quality of Life-6D scale |
| BAI | Becks Anxiety Inventory Scale (validated tool) |
| BDI | Becks Depression Inventory Scale (validated tool) |
| BED | Binge eating disorder |
| BMI | Body mass index: weight/height |
| BMI-SDS | BMI Standard Deviation Score |
| BP | Bipolar (mental health disorder) |
| CBCL | Child Behavior Checklist (validated tool) |
| CBCL-23 | Child Behavior Checklist 23 items |
| CDCAP | Centre for Disease Control and Prevention. Using BMI centiles for age/sex-specific reference |
| CDI | Child Depression Inventory (validated tool) |
| CD | Conduct disorders |
| CDI | Children’s Depressive Symptoms Inventory (validated tool) |
| CES-DC | Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale for Children |
| CGI | Clinical Global Impression (severity of mood and eating disorders) |
| ChEAT | The Children’s Eating Attitudes Test |
| ChEDE-Q | Children’s Eating Disorder Examination Questionnaire |
| CNRC | Children’s Nutrition Research Center, US |
| CPRS | Connors Parenting Rating Scale |
| CPTRS | Connors Parent and Teacher Rating Scale |
| DHMS | Daily Hassle Microsystem Scale |
| DI | Diagnostic Interview |
| DISC–IV | Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children |
| DISC–V1 | Diagnostic Interview Schedule for Children 6th Edition |
| DSM-III | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 3rd Edition |
| DSM-IV | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 4th Edition |
| DSM-IV-TR | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – 4th Edition, text revision |
| DSMMD | Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders |
| EAT | Eating Amongst Teens |
| EDE | Eating Disorder Examination |
| EDE-Q | Eating Disorder Examination Self-Report Questionnaire |
| EF | Executive Functioning |
| HOYVS | Health of Young Victorians’ Study |
| HRQoL | Health-Related Quality of Life |
| ICD-10 | ICD-10 is the 10th revision of the International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems by WHO |
| IOTF | International Obesity Task force (reference data with cutoff points for weight status) |
| K-SADS-PL | Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia for School-age Children: present and lifetime version (validated tool) |
| KIDSCREEN-27 | Generic HRQoL for youths aged 8–18 years: subscales physical well-being, psychological well-being, autonomy and parents, social support and peers, school environment (validated tool) |
| KIDSCREEN-52 | Self-perception of security and satisfaction, eg, appearance (internal consistency) |
| KINDL | Measure HRQoL for children and adolescents – captures experiences associated with OW/OB children |
| MDD | Major depressive disorder |
| MDQ | Mood Disorder Questionnaire |
| MHI-5 | Mental Health Inventory-5 (validated tool). |
| MI | Malaise Inventory |
| NGRCCA | National Growth Reference for Chinese Children and Adolescents |
| NIH | National Institute of Health |
| OB | Obese |
| ODD | Oppositional Defiant Disorder |
| OR | Odds ratio |
| OW | Overweight |
| PA | Physical activity |
| PedQol | Pediatric Quality of Life inventory (validated tool) |
| POTS | Perceptions of Teasing Scale (validated tool) |
| QoL | Quality of life |
| RPS | Rutter Parent Scale |
| SAPAC | Self-Administered Physical Activity Checklist (validated tool) |
| SAS | Social Anxiety Scale (validated tool) |
| SCID | Structured Clinical Examination for DSM-IV (validated) |
| SDC | Social Development Scale |
| SDQ | Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (validated tool) |
| SECCYD | Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development |
| SEI | Self-Esteem Inventory (validated tool) |
| SES | Socio-Economic Status |
| SLAITS | State and Local Area Telephone Survey |
| SMFQ-D | Short Moods and Feelings Questionnaire (high internal consistency) |
| SPSQ | Swedish Parenting Stress Questionnaire (4 domains-SPSQ: life-events/social support, frequency of exposure [validated tool]) |
| STAI/STAIc | State Trait Anxiety Inventory/for Children (validated tool) |
| SWAN | Strengths/Weaknesses of ADHD/Normal Behavior |
| SPSQ | Swedish Parenting Stress Questionnaire (validated tool) |
| TEENS | Teaching, Encouragement, Exercise, Nutrition, Support Program |
| UW | Underweight |
| UWCBs | Unhealthy Weight Control Behaviors |
| WHO | World Health Organization |