EPPI-Centre, Social Science Research Unit, Institute of Education, 18 Woburn Square, London, WC1H 0NR, UK.
BMC Public Health. 2011 Mar 25;11:188. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-188.
There are high levels of concern about childhood obesity, with obese children being at higher risk of poorer health both in the short and longer terms. Children's attitudes to, and beliefs about, their bodies have also raised concern. Children themselves have a stake in this debate; their perspectives on this issue can inform the ways in which interventions aim to work.This systematic review of qualitative and quantitative research aimed to explore the views of UK children about the meanings of obesity and body size, shape or weight and their own experiences of these issues.
We conducted sensitive searches of electronic databases and specialist websites, and contacted experts. We included studies published from the start of 1997 which reported the perspectives of UK children aged 4-11 about obesity or body size, shape or weight, and which described key aspects of their methods. Included studies were coded and quality-assessed by two reviewers independently.Findings were synthesised in two analyses: i) an interpretive synthesis of findings from open-ended questions; and ii) an aggregative synthesis of findings from closed questions. We juxtaposed the findings from the two syntheses. The effect of excluding the lowest quality studies was explored. We also consulted young people to explore the credibility of a subset of findings.
We included 28 studies. Instead of a focus on health, children emphasised the social impact of body size, describing experiences and awareness of abuse and isolation for children with a greater weight. Body size was seen as under the individual's control and children attributed negative characteristics to overweight people. Children actively assessed their own size; many wished their bodies were different and some were anxious about their shape.Reviewers judged that children's engagement and participation in discussion had only rarely been supported in the included studies, and few study findings had depth or breadth.
Initiatives need to consider the social aspects of obesity, in particular unhelpful beliefs, attitudes and discriminatory behaviours around body size. Researchers and policy-makers should involve children actively and seek their views on appropriate forms of support around this issue.
人们对儿童肥胖问题高度关注,肥胖儿童在短期和长期内健康状况较差的风险更高。儿童对自己身体的态度和信念也引起了关注。儿童本身也与这场争论息息相关;他们对这个问题的看法可以为旨在解决这些问题的干预措施提供信息。本系统评价旨在探索英国儿童对肥胖和身体大小、形状或体重的含义的看法,以及他们对这些问题的自身经历,纳入的研究为定性和定量研究。
我们对电子数据库和专业网站进行了敏感搜索,并联系了专家。我们纳入了自 1997 年初以来发表的研究,这些研究报告了英国 4-11 岁儿童对肥胖或身体大小、形状或体重的看法,并描述了其方法的关键方面。纳入的研究由两位审查员独立进行编码和质量评估。结果通过两种分析进行综合:i)对开放式问题的发现进行解释性综合;ii)对封闭式问题的发现进行综合。我们并列了这两种综合的发现。我们还探讨了排除质量最低的研究的影响。我们还咨询了年轻人,以探索一部分发现的可信度。
我们纳入了 28 项研究。儿童不再关注健康,而是强调身体大小的社会影响,描述了体重较大的儿童遭受虐待和孤立的经历和意识。身体大小被认为是个人可控的,儿童将负面特征归因于超重者。儿童积极评估自己的体型;许多人希望自己的身体不同,有些人对自己的体型感到焦虑。审查员判断,纳入的研究很少有支持儿童参与讨论的,并且很少有研究结果有深度或广度。
干预措施需要考虑肥胖的社会方面,特别是围绕身体大小的无益信念、态度和歧视行为。研究人员和政策制定者应该积极让儿童参与,并就这一问题寻求他们对适当形式的支持的看法。