Olvera Norma, Scherer Rhonda, Wu Weiwei, Roy Tamal J, Matthews-Ewald Molly R, Fan Weihua, Arbona Consuelo
Department of Psychological, Health & Learning Sciences, University of Houston, 3657 Cullen Boulevard, Farish Hall Room 491, Houston, TX 77204, USA.
WhitworthKee Consulting, Washington, DC 20003, USA.
Healthcare (Basel). 2025 Aug 27;13(17):2135. doi: 10.3390/healthcare13172135.
: This study investigated how doctor visit(s), body image discrepancy, and perceived health status are associated with receiving a medical weight problem diagnosis. : The sample included 458 Hispanic adults (366 women, 92 men) who completed a health survey at health fairs. : Descriptive analyses indicated that 51.4% of women and 54.3% of men were classified as overweight or obese, yet only 30% received a medical weight problem diagnosis. Most participants selected an ideal body shape that was thinner than their perceived body shape. Separate logistic regression analyses were conducted by gender to assess associations between body image discrepancy, perceived health status, and receiving a medical weight problem diagnosis, controlling for age. Findings revealed that women who had visited a doctor in the past year had 5.02 times the odds (95% CI:1.98-12.73) of receiving a medical weight problem diagnosis compared to those who had not. Each one-point increase in body image discrepancy was associated with a 1.88-fold increase in the odds of receiving a diagnosis (95% CI:1.49-2.37). Conversely, a one-point increase in perceived health status was associated with 1.59 times the odds (95% CI: 0.47-0.83) of not receiving a diagnosis. For men, those who had visited the doctor in the past year had 14.17 times the odds (95% CI:1.53-131.17) of receiving a medical weight problem diagnosis. Each one-point increase in body image discrepancy was associated with 1.60 times the odds of receiving a diagnosis (95% CI:1.01-2.54). However, perceived health status was not a significant predictor of diagnosis among men. : Addressing healthcare access barriers and considering the roles of body image and perceived health status could improve obesity diagnosis and treatment in Hispanic populations.
本研究调查了看医生的次数、身体意象差异和感知健康状况与获得医学上的体重问题诊断之间的关联。样本包括458名西班牙裔成年人(366名女性,92名男性),他们在健康博览会上完成了一项健康调查。描述性分析表明,51.4%的女性和54.3%的男性被归类为超重或肥胖,但只有30%的人获得了医学上的体重问题诊断。大多数参与者选择的理想体型比他们感知到的体型更瘦。按性别进行了单独的逻辑回归分析,以评估身体意象差异、感知健康状况与获得医学上的体重问题诊断之间的关联,并对年龄进行了控制。研究结果显示,与未看过医生的女性相比,过去一年看过医生的女性获得医学上的体重问题诊断的几率是其5.02倍(95%置信区间:1.98 - 12.73)。身体意象差异每增加一分,获得诊断的几率就增加1.88倍(95%置信区间:1.49 - 2.37)。相反,感知健康状况每增加一分,未获得诊断的几率是其1.59倍(95%置信区间:0.47 - 0.83)。对于男性来说,过去一年看过医生的男性获得医学上的体重问题诊断的几率是其14.17倍(95%置信区间:1.53 - 131.17)。身体意象差异每增加一分,获得诊断的几率就增加1.60倍(95%置信区间:1.01 - 2.54)。然而,感知健康状况在男性中并不是诊断的显著预测因素。解决医疗保健获取障碍并考虑身体意象和感知健康状况的作用,可能会改善西班牙裔人群的肥胖诊断和治疗。