Gipson Gilbert W, Reese Serena, Vieweg W Victor R, Anum Emmanuel A, Pandurangi Anand K, Olbrisch Mary Ellen, Sood Bela, Silverman Joel J
Department of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation, Virginia State University, Petersburg, VA, USA.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2005 Feb;97(2):225-36.
The obesity epidemic is a major problem in the United States, particularly among black women. Body image and attitudes toward obesity are important areas to understand and address in any comprehensive approach to this epidemic.
From an initial evaluation of 200 college students (25 male and 25 female freshmen, sophomores, juniors and seniors each) attending an historically black university, we selected those students who identified themselves as black for data analysis (n = 191). All students underwent height and weight measurement from which body mass index (BMI) was calculated. Each student answered two questions related to nine silhouettes for each sex that progressively moved from extreme thinness to extreme obesity. Also, each student answered 20 questions describing attitudes about obesity.
Black college students placed between the 62nd and 72nd percentiles of national BMI data for adolescents. Black female students were more likely than their black male counterparts to be obese. BMI did not vary by sex or grade level. Students of both sexes generally preferred "trim" silhouettes with the caveat that students with BMIs <25 kg/m2 preferred smaller silhouettes than did students with BMIs > or =25 kg/m2. BMI and sex did not favor any particular set of attitudes toward obesity.
Black male and female college students from an historically black university were largely in the "normal" range of BMI percentiles for sex and age. Our black female students were more likely to be obese than our black male students. Our findings suggest that young black women are tolerant of a variety of body sizes. Based on findings from our Attitudes Toward Obese Persons scale, body size sense of self and sex do not influence attitudes toward obese persons. Further studies are needed.
肥胖流行是美国的一个主要问题,在黑人女性中尤为突出。在应对这一流行病的任何综合方法中,身体形象和对肥胖的态度都是需要理解和解决的重要领域。
在对一所历史悠久的黑人大学的200名大学生(25名男性和25名女性新生、大二学生、大三学生和大四学生各25名)进行初步评估后,我们挑选出那些自认为是黑人的学生进行数据分析(n = 191)。所有学生都接受了身高和体重测量,并据此计算体重指数(BMI)。每个学生回答了与每种性别的九个轮廓相关的两个问题,这些轮廓从极度消瘦逐渐过渡到极度肥胖。此外,每个学生回答了20个描述对肥胖态度的问题。
黑人大学生的BMI处于全国青少年数据的第62至72百分位之间。黑人女学生比黑人男学生更有可能肥胖。BMI在性别或年级水平上没有差异。男女学生通常都更喜欢“苗条”的轮廓,但BMI<25 kg/m²的学生比BMI≥25 kg/m²的学生更喜欢更小的轮廓。BMI和性别对任何特定的肥胖态度没有影响。
来自一所历史悠久的黑人大学的黑人男女大学生的BMI在按性别和年龄划分的百分位“正常”范围内。我们的黑人女学生比黑人男学生更有可能肥胖。我们的研究结果表明,年轻黑人女性对各种体型持宽容态度。根据我们的《对肥胖者的态度量表》的研究结果,体型自我认知和性别不会影响对肥胖者的态度。需要进一步研究。