Brown Callie L, Skinner Asheley C, Yin H Shonna, Rothman Russell L, Sanders Lee M, Delamater Alan M, Ravanbakht Sophie N, Perrin Eliana M
Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC.
Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Department of Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC.
Acad Pediatr. 2016 Aug;16(6):558-64. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2016.03.005. Epub 2016 Mar 19.
More than half of parents underestimate their overweight child's weight; however, previous research focuses on children older than 2 years of age. The objective of this study was to assess whether parents of 2- to 12-month-old infants are able to accurately perceive their children's weight status.
We performed a cross-sectional analysis of data collected from the Greenlight study, a cluster randomized obesity prevention trial, at 4 pediatric clinics serving diverse and low-income populations. Infants' length and weight were measured at well-child checks, and parents completed questionnaires including demographic characteristics and perception of their children's weight. Weight-for-length (WFL) percentile at the fifth to ≤95 was considered healthy weight and WFL percentile >95th was considered overweight. We used chi-squared tests to compare accuracy according to weight category and performed logistic regression analysis to assess accuracy at each time point.
Approximately 85% to 90% of infants (n = 853 at 2 months, n = 563 at 12 months) were at a healthy WFL at all measurement times, and parents of these infants were more likely to have an accurate perception of their child's weight (accuracy 89%-95%) than overweight children (accuracy 7%-26%; P < .001 across time points). Approximately 10% of healthy weight infants were perceived as underweight by their parents at all time points. At 12 months, mothers who were overweight were significantly more likely to underestimate their child's weight status (P = .008).
In our diverse and low-income sample, parents of overweight infants infrequently know that their infants are overweight. Future studies should examine how perception is related to feeding habits and weight status over time.
超过半数的家长低估了自家超重孩子的体重;然而,先前的研究聚焦于2岁以上的儿童。本研究的目的是评估2至12个月大婴儿的家长是否能够准确感知孩子的体重状况。
我们对从“绿灯研究”收集的数据进行了横断面分析,该研究是一项整群随机肥胖预防试验,在4家为不同的低收入人群服务的儿科诊所开展。在儿童健康检查时测量婴儿的身长和体重,家长填写问卷,内容包括人口统计学特征以及对孩子体重的认知。身长体重比(WFL)百分位数在第5至≤95被视为健康体重,WFL百分位数>95则被视为超重。我们使用卡方检验根据体重类别比较准确性,并进行逻辑回归分析以评估每个时间点的准确性。
在所有测量时间点,约85%至90%的婴儿(2个月时n = 853,12个月时n = 563)身长体重比处于健康范围,这些婴儿的家长比超重儿童的家长更有可能准确感知孩子的体重(准确率89% - 95%),超重儿童家长的准确率为7% - 26%;各时间点P <.001。在所有时间点,约10%体重正常的婴儿被家长认为体重过轻。在12个月时,超重的母亲显著更有可能低估孩子的体重状况(P = 0.008)。
在我们多样化的低收入样本中,超重婴儿的家长很少知道自己的婴儿超重。未来的研究应考察认知如何随时间与喂养习惯和体重状况相关联。