Suppr超能文献

黑人和白人女性对理想体型及社会规范的认知。

Black and white females' perceptions of ideal body size and social norms.

作者信息

Kemper K A, Sargent R G, Drane J W, Valois R F, Hussey J R

机构信息

Department of Health Science, Clemson University, Clemson, South Carolina, USA.

出版信息

Obes Res. 1994 Mar;2(2):117-26. doi: 10.1002/j.1550-8528.1994.tb00637.x.

Abstract

Different cultural norms and standards for appropriate female body size might contribute to the disparity in obesity rates between black and white adult females (46.0% and 24.6% respectively). The purpose of this study was to measure adolescents' perceptions of ideal size and social norms regarding female body size as well as adolescents' perceptions of significant others' evaluation and expectations of the adolescents' body size. Subjects included 437 adolescent girls (247 white and 190 black) aged 13 to 19 (x = 14.9, SD = .979) from six randomly selected public schools. The subjects, heights and weights were measured. Responses to a body image questionnaire and a series of nine female body drawings (arranged ordinally, 1 to 9, from thinnest to heaviest) were analyzed using the General Linear Model and Logistic Regression. The female body size considered ideal by black females was significantly larger than the size selected as ideal by white females (x = 3.47 and x = 3.13 respectively, p < 0.001). Black females were two times more likely than white females to describe themselves as thinner than other girls their age (O.R. = 2.01, 95% C.I. 1.34, 3.01) and seven times as likely to say that they were not overweight (O.R. = 7.08, 95% C.I. 3.72, 13.45). White females wanted to be a smaller size than they currently were and felt encouraged by significant others to lose weight or reduce their size. Black females did not indicate as great a desire as whites to be smaller and they tended to feel that their size was considered satisfactory by significant others. Only subjects from the low SES group perceived that significant others wanted them to gain weight. The differences between black and white subjects' beliefs and perceptions about body size norms may explain, in part, why heavier body weights persist in some cultural groups.

摘要

对于女性合适身材的不同文化规范和标准,可能导致成年黑人女性和白人女性肥胖率的差异(分别为46.0%和24.6%)。本研究的目的是衡量青少年对理想身材的认知以及关于女性身材的社会规范,还有青少年对重要他人对其身材评价和期望的认知。研究对象包括来自六所随机挑选的公立学校的437名13至19岁的青少年女孩(247名白人女孩和190名黑人女孩)(x = 14.9,标准差 = 0.979)。测量了研究对象的身高和体重。使用一般线性模型和逻辑回归分析了对身体形象问卷以及一系列九张女性身体绘图(按顺序排列,从最瘦到最胖,1至9)的回答。黑人女性认为理想的女性身材显著大于白人女性选择的理想身材(分别为x = 3.47和x = 3.13,p < 0.001)。黑人女性描述自己比同龄其他女孩瘦的可能性是白人女性的两倍(比值比 = 2.01,95%置信区间1.34,3.01),说自己不超重的可能性是白人女性的七倍(比值比 = 7.08,95%置信区间3.72,13.45)。白人女性希望自己的身材比当前更小,并感到重要他人鼓励她们减肥或缩小身材。黑人女性想要变瘦的愿望不如白人强烈,并且她们倾向于觉得重要他人认为她们的身材令人满意。只有来自低社会经济地位群体的研究对象认为重要他人希望她们增重。黑人和白人研究对象对身材规范的信念和认知差异,可能部分解释了为什么在一些文化群体中较重的体重持续存在。

文献AI研究员

20分钟写一篇综述,助力文献阅读效率提升50倍。

立即体验

用中文搜PubMed

大模型驱动的PubMed中文搜索引擎

马上搜索

文档翻译

学术文献翻译模型,支持多种主流文档格式。

立即体验