| Literature DB >> 30674226 |
Kiya Dues1, Jayanthi Kandiah2, Jagdish Khubchandani2, Amber Haroldson1.
Abstract
To assess the prevalence of weight misperception in American adolescents and its association with diet and physical activity behaviors, Youth Risk Behavior Survey data were utilized for this study. Based on reported and perceived weight, adolescents in the study were grouped into four categories (true negative [52.4%] = normal body mass index [BMI]/accurate weight perception; false negative [11.3%] = high BMI/weight misperception; false positive [11.6%] = normal BMI/weight misperception; and true positive [24.8%] = high BMI/accurate weight perception). Diet and physical activity of adolescents were compared in these categories. A total of 12,016 participants were included in our analysis (74.9% aged 15-17 years, 54.5% Whites, 52% females). Almost a third (31.8%) were overweight and obese, and more than a fifth (22.9%) misperceived their weight (11.6% overestimated and 11.3% underestimated their weight). In a gender-stratified analysis, the odds of avoiding a healthy diet and physical inactivity were higher among those with body weight misperception.Entities:
Keywords: adolescents; diet; exercise; obesity; overweight; weight perception
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30674226 DOI: 10.1177/1059840518824386
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sch Nurs ISSN: 1059-8405 Impact factor: 2.835