| Literature DB >> 29669539 |
Samantha L Hahn1, Kelley A Borton1, Kendrin R Sonneville2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Weight misperception occurs when there is a discrepancy between one's actual and perceived weight status. Among adolescents with overweight/obesity, many believe that correcting weight misperception is imperative to inspire weight-related behavior change. However, past research has shown that adolescents with overweight/obesity who misperceive their weight status gain less weight over time compared to accurate perceivers. Therefore, our objective was to examine possible mechanisms underlying this relationship. Specifically, we examined the association between weight misperception and engagement in weight-related health behaviors among adolescents with overweight/obesity.Entities:
Keywords: Adolescent; Nutrition; Obesity; Overweight; Physical activity; Weight misperception
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29669539 PMCID: PMC5907388 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-018-5394-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Prevalence of weight misperception by demographic characteristics among U.S. high school students with overweight/obesity
| Demographic characteristics | Sampled frequency, | Weight misperception frequency, |
|---|---|---|
| Sexa | ||
| Female | 2003 (44.5) | 426 (21.4) |
| Male | 2380 (55.5) | 900 (39.1) |
| Race/ethnicityb | ||
| American Indian/Alaskan Native | 50 (0.6) | 17 (30.7) |
| Asian | 111 (2.2) | 33 (20.8) |
| Hispanic/Latino | 1672 (25.3) | 457 (28.3) |
| Multiple Race/Ethnicities Non-Hispanic | 223 (5.1) | 67 (23.3) |
| Native Hawaiian/other Pacific Islander | 29 (0.6) | 8 (37.2) |
| Non-Hispanic black or African American | 479 (14.5) | 202 (41.0) |
| Non-Hispanic white | 1819 (51.8) | 542 (31.0) |
| Grade in schoolc | ||
| 9th | 1120 (26.4) | 376 (35.6) |
| 10th | 1129 (26.6) | 357 (30.7) |
| 11th | 1152 (24.3) | 330 (30.2) |
| 12th | 982 (22.7) | 263 (27.7) |
All Percentages reported are weighted to account for sampling design
aPrevalence estimates of weight misperception and all disordered weight control behaviors differ by sex (p < .01)
bPrevalence estimates of weight misperception differ by race/ethnicity (p < .01)
cPrevalence estimates of weight misperception marginally different by grade in school (p = .08)
Fig. 1Odds of reporting engagement in weight-related health behaviors among weight misperceivers compared to accurate perceivers