Howe Carol J, Alexander Gina, Stevenson Jada
Harris College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
Department of Nutritional Sciences, College of Science and Engineering, Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, TX, United States.
J Pediatr Nurs. 2017 Nov-Dec;37:57-61. doi: 10.1016/j.pedn.2017.06.005. Epub 2017 Jun 16.
Obesity prevention efforts may be ineffective if parents lack awareness of their children's overweight status. This study examined the factors that predicted parents' underestimation of child weight status.
Using a cross sectional design, researchers recruited children and parents in a local children's museum. Parents completed a demographic questionnaire, the Newest Vital Sign, and the Child Body Image Scale. Children's height and weight were measured to calculate child BMI. Random effects modeling examined the association between predictor variables (parent race/ethnicity, income, education, and health literacy, and child BMI percentile, gender, and age) and the dependent variable, parent underestimation of child weight status.
Participants included 160 parents (213 children aged 7-12years) representing a racially and ethnically diverse sample who were affluent, educated, and with 36.6% of parents assessed with limited health literacy. Although 45.1% of children were overweight/obese, only 7.5% of parents chose this weight status; 80% of parents underestimated the weight of their normal weight children, 96% underestimated their overweight children, and 72% underestimated their obese children. Parents were more likely to underestimate weight of older children and those under 81st percentile of BMI. No other predictors were significant.
Parent underestimation of child weight status appears to be a widespread phenomenon in this sample, regardless of race, ethnicity, income, education, and health literacy.
The consistent underestimation of child weight suggests that parents' misperception of weight status represents a critical pathway for intervention. Methods to improve parents' perception of child weight need be developed and tested.
如果父母对其子女的超重状况缺乏认知,那么预防肥胖的努力可能会无效。本研究调查了预测父母低估子女体重状况的因素。
采用横断面设计,研究人员在当地一家儿童博物馆招募了儿童及其父母。父母完成了一份人口统计学调查问卷、最新生命体征问卷和儿童身体意象量表。测量了儿童的身高和体重以计算儿童的体重指数(BMI)。随机效应模型检验了预测变量(父母的种族/民族、收入、教育程度和健康素养,以及儿童的BMI百分位数、性别和年龄)与因变量(父母低估子女体重状况)之间的关联。
参与者包括160名父母(213名7至12岁的儿童),他们代表了一个种族和民族多样化的样本,这些父母富裕、受过教育,且36.6%的父母被评估为健康素养有限。尽管45.1%的儿童超重/肥胖,但只有7.5%的父母选择了这个体重状况;80%的父母低估了体重正常的子女的体重,96%的父母低估了超重子女的体重,72%的父母低估了肥胖子女的体重。父母更有可能低估年龄较大儿童以及BMI低于第81百分位数儿童的体重。没有其他预测因素具有显著性。
在这个样本中,父母低估子女体重状况似乎是一种普遍现象,无论种族、民族、收入、教育程度和健康素养如何。
对儿童体重的持续低估表明,父母对体重状况的错误认知是一个关键的干预途径。需要开发并测试提高父母对儿童体重认知的方法。