Wright Davene R, Lozano Paula, Dawson-Hahn Elizabeth, Christakis Dimitri A, Haaland Wren L, Basu Anirban
Department of Pediatrics, University of Washington School of Medicine, Seattle, Wash; Center for Child Health, Behavior, and Development, Seattle Children's Research Institute, Seattle, Wash.
Group Health Research Institute, Seattle, Wash.
Acad Pediatr. 2016 Jul;16(5):475-481. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2016.02.007. Epub 2016 Feb 12.
To assess how parents perceive long-term risks for developing obesity-related chronic health conditions.
A Web-based nationally representative survey was administered to 502 US parents with a 5- to 12-year-old child. Parents reported whether their child was most likely to be at a healthy weight or overweight, and the probability that their child would develop hypertension, heart disease, depression, or type 2 diabetes in adulthood. Responses of parents of children with overweight and obesity were compared to those of healthy-weight children using multivariate models.
The survey had an overall response rate of 39.2%. The mean (SD) unadjusted parent predicted health risks were 15.4% (17.7%), 11.2% (14.7%), 12.5% (16.2%), and 12.1% (16.1%) for hypertension, heart disease, depression, and diabetes, respectively. Despite underperceiving their child's current body mass index class, parents of children with obesity estimate their children to be at greater risk for obesity-related health conditions than parents of healthy-weight children by 5 to 6 percentage points. Having a family history of a chronic disease, higher quality of care, and older parent age were also significant predictors of estimating higher risk probabilities.
Despite evidence that parents of children who are overweight may not perceive these children as being overweight, parents unexpectedly estimate greater future risk of weight-related health conditions for these children. Focusing communication about weight on screening for and reducing the risk of weight-related diseases may prove useful in engaging parents and children in weight management.
评估父母如何看待儿童患肥胖相关慢性健康问题的长期风险。
对502名有5至12岁孩子的美国父母进行了一项基于网络的全国代表性调查。父母报告他们的孩子最有可能体重正常还是超重,以及他们的孩子成年后患高血压、心脏病、抑郁症或2型糖尿病的可能性。使用多变量模型将超重和肥胖儿童的父母的回答与体重正常儿童的父母的回答进行比较。
该调查的总体回复率为39.2%。未经调整的父母预测的高血压、心脏病、抑郁症和糖尿病的健康风险均值(标准差)分别为15.4%(17.7%)、11.2%(14.7%)、12.5%(16.2%)和12.1%(16.1%)。尽管对孩子当前的体重指数类别认识不足,但肥胖儿童的父母估计他们的孩子患肥胖相关健康问题的风险比体重正常儿童的父母高5至6个百分点。有慢性病家族史、更高的护理质量和父母年龄较大也是估计更高风险概率的重要预测因素。
尽管有证据表明超重儿童的父母可能没有意识到这些孩子超重,但父母意外地估计这些孩子未来患体重相关健康问题的风险更大。将关于体重的沟通重点放在筛查和降低体重相关疾病的风险上,可能有助于促使父母和孩子参与体重管理。