Department of Health Science, Center for Latino Community Health, Evaluation, and Leadership Training, California State University Long Beach, Long Beach, CA.
School of Public Health, Institute for Behavioral and Community Health, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA.
Child Obes. 2020 Jan;16(1):44-52. doi: 10.1089/chi.2019.0015. Epub 2019 Sep 26.
Failure to recognize children's overweight status by parents may contribute to children's risk for obesity. We examined two methods of measuring mothers' perceptions of children's weight and factors associated with weight perception inaccuracy. Cross-sectional analyses of clinical and self-report data from 287 Mexican-heritage mother-child dyads. Mothers identified their child's weight category using a scale (, "normal/overweight/obese") and a visual silhouette scale (11 child gender-specific weight-varying images). Children's height and weight were measured to calculate body mass index (BMI). Chi-square tests examined associations between categorical, silhouette, and BMI percentile categories of children's weight. Bivariate logistic regression analyses examined factors associated with mothers' inaccuracy of their children's weight. Only 13% of mothers accurately classified their child as obese using the categorical scale, while 78% accurately classified their child as obese using the silhouette scale. Mothers were more likely to underestimate their child's weight using BMI categories (62%) compared to using the silhouette scale (23%). Predictors of mothers' underestimation using the categorical method were child sex [female] (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] = 1.99; 95% CI: 1.02-3.86), child age [younger age] (AOR = 10.39; 95% CI: 4.16-25.92 for ages 5-6 years), and mother's weight status (overweight AOR = 2.99; 95% CI: 1.05-8.51; obese AOR = 5.19; 95% CI: 1.89-14.18). Child BMI was the only predictor of mothers' overestimation (AOR = 0.89; 95% CI: 0.85-0.94) using the silhouette method. Using silhouette scales to identify children's body weight may be a more accurate tool for clinicians and interventionists to activate parents' awareness of unhealthy weight in children compared to using traditional categorical weight-labeling methods.
父母未能识别孩子的超重状况可能会增加孩子肥胖的风险。我们研究了两种测量母亲对孩子体重的认知的方法,以及与体重认知不准确相关的因素。
对 287 对墨西哥裔母子的临床和自我报告数据进行横断面分析。母亲使用量表(“正常/超重/肥胖”)和视觉轮廓量表(11 张儿童性别特定的体重变化图像)来确定孩子的体重类别。测量孩子的身高和体重以计算体重指数(BMI)。卡方检验检查了儿童体重的分类、轮廓和 BMI 百分位类别之间的关联。双变量逻辑回归分析检查了与母亲对孩子体重不准确相关的因素。
只有 13%的母亲使用分类量表准确地将孩子归类为肥胖,而 78%的母亲使用轮廓量表准确地将孩子归类为肥胖。与使用轮廓量表(23%)相比,母亲使用 BMI 类别更有可能低估孩子的体重(62%)。使用分类方法的母亲低估的预测因素是孩子的性别[女性](调整后的优势比[OR] = 1.99;95%置信区间:1.02-3.86)、孩子的年龄[较小的年龄](OR = 10.39;95%置信区间:4.16-25.92 岁)和母亲的体重状况(超重 OR = 2.99;95%置信区间:1.05-8.51;肥胖 OR = 5.19;95%置信区间:1.89-14.18)。使用轮廓法,只有孩子的 BMI 是母亲高估的唯一预测因素(OR = 0.89;95%置信区间:0.85-0.94)。与传统的体重分类标记方法相比,使用轮廓量表来识别儿童的体重可能是临床医生和干预者激活父母对儿童不健康体重意识的更准确工具。