child’s weight
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Author(s):  
Annick Xhonneux ◽  
Jean-Paul Langhendries ◽  
Françoise Martin ◽  
Laurence Seidel ◽  
Adelin Albert ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Maternal perception of child weight status in children with overweight or obesity has received a lot of attention but data on paternal perception of children from presumably healthy cohorts are lacking. Objective We aimed to investigate paternal and maternal perception of child weight status at the age of 8 years in a cohort of 591 children from 5 European countries. Material and Methods Included were 8-year-old children and their parents participating in the European Childhood Obesity Project (EU CHOP). Weight and height of children and parents were measured and Body Mass Index (BMI, kg/m2) was calculated. Both parents were asked to assess their perception of child weight status using Eckstein scales and their concern about child overweight. The agreement between mother and father perceptions was assessed by Cohen kappa coefficient and their relationship was analyzed by linear mixed effects models based on ordinal logistic regression, accounting for country, child gender and BMI, parental BMI, level of education, concern and type of feeding during first year of life. Results Data from children and both parents were available for 432 girls and boys. Mean BMI was comparable in boys and girls (16.7 ± 2.31 vs. 16.9 ± 2.87 kg/m2, P = 0.55). In total, 172 children (29.3%) were overweight or obese. There was a high degree of agreement between mother and father perceptions of their child’s weight status (Cohen kappa 0.77). Multivariate modelling showed that perception levels significantly increased with child BMI but were globally lower than assessed. They differed between countries, gender and types of feeding during first year of life, were influenced by education level of the father but were not related to parental BMI and concern about childhood overweight. Conclusions The study showed no overall differences between mothers and fathers in rating their child’s weight status but both parents had a propensity to underestimate their child’s actual weight, particularly in boys. The EU CHOP trial registered at clinicaltrials.gov as NCT00338689.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Amy Michelle Lovegrove

<p>Extensive literature has documented the negative impacts of being overweight in childhood, and the difficulty in getting parents to acknowledge and act on their children’s overweight status. This study aims to investigate whether social desirability could be one contributing factor to this struggle. Social desirability is a phenomenon in which individuals present themselves in the most culturally celebrated way possible, regardless of whether that is an accurate reflection of their actual self. It is argued that individuals high in social desirability may deny their children’s overweight status and unhealthy behaviours due to the high social pressure for their child to be of a healthy weight. It was found that low levels of social desirability lead to reporting more congruous with the child’s weight status for some health behaviours, but that it did not impact reporting of the child’s weight status itself. Implications for practice are discussed.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Amy Michelle Lovegrove

<p>Extensive literature has documented the negative impacts of being overweight in childhood, and the difficulty in getting parents to acknowledge and act on their children’s overweight status. This study aims to investigate whether social desirability could be one contributing factor to this struggle. Social desirability is a phenomenon in which individuals present themselves in the most culturally celebrated way possible, regardless of whether that is an accurate reflection of their actual self. It is argued that individuals high in social desirability may deny their children’s overweight status and unhealthy behaviours due to the high social pressure for their child to be of a healthy weight. It was found that low levels of social desirability lead to reporting more congruous with the child’s weight status for some health behaviours, but that it did not impact reporting of the child’s weight status itself. Implications for practice are discussed.</p>


Obesity Facts ◽  
2021 ◽  
pp. 1-17
Author(s):  
Ximena Ramos Salas ◽  
Marta Buoncristiano ◽  
Julianne Williams ◽  
Maryam Kebbe ◽  
Angela Spinelli ◽  
...  

<b><i>Introduction:</i></b> Parents can act as important agents of change and support for healthy childhood growth and development. Studies have found that parents may not be able to accurately perceive their child’s weight status. The purpose of this study was to measure parental perceptions of their child’s weight status and to identify predictors of potential parental misperceptions. <b><i>Methods:</i></b> We used data from the World Health Organization (WHO) European Childhood Obesity Surveillance Initiative and 22 countries. Parents were asked to identify their perceptions of their children’s weight status as “underweight,” “normal weight,” “a little overweight,” or “extremely overweight.” We categorized children’s (6–9 years; <i>n</i> = 124,296) body mass index (BMI) as BMI-for-age Z-scores based on the 2007 WHO-recommended growth references. For each country included in the analysis and pooled estimates (country level), we calculated the distribution of children according to the WHO weight status classification, distribution by parental perception of child’s weight status, percentages of accurate, overestimating, or underestimating perceptions, misclassification levels, and predictors of parental misperceptions using a multilevel logistic regression analysis that included only children with overweight (<i>including</i> obesity). Statistical analyses were performed using Stata version 15 1. <b><i>Results:</i></b> Overall, 64.1% of parents categorized their child’s weight status accurately relative to the WHO growth charts. However, parents were more likely to underestimate their child’s weight if the child had overweight (82.3%) or obesity (93.8%). Parents were more likely to underestimate their child’s weight if the child was male (adjusted OR [adjOR]: 1.41; 95% confidence intervals [CI]: 1.28–1.55); the parent had a lower educational level (adjOR: 1.41; 95% CI: 1.26–1.57); the father was asked rather than the mother (adjOR: 1.14; 95% CI: 0.98–1.33); and the family lived in a rural area (adjOR: 1.10; 95% CI: 0.99–1.24). Overall, parents’ BMI was not strongly associated with the underestimation of children’s weight status, but there was a stronger association in some countries. <b><i>Discussion/Conclusion:</i></b> Our study supplements the current literature on factors that influence parental perceptions of their child’s weight status. Public health interventions aimed at promoting healthy childhood growth and development should consider parents’ knowledge and perceptions, as well as the sociocultural contexts in which children and families live.


PLoS ONE ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 16 (9) ◽  
pp. e0252981
Author(s):  
Tanna Woods ◽  
Mary A. Nies

Background Parental misperception and underestimation of their child’s weight are documented in studies. Demographic factors like age and gender have been linked to misclassification. However, modifiable factors that could potentially frame future intervention and prevention strategies have not been explored. This study aimed to assess factors that could predict parental misclassification of their preschool child’s weight. Methods This was a cross-sectional study with 198 parents and their 2- to 5-year-old children who attended standalone preschools or childcare centers with preschools. Parents completed a questionnaire that asked about demographic features, personal and family health, and the assessment of their child’s weight using the three most frequently utilized measures. Logistic regression was conducted to assess the association between parental factors and child weight classification status. Instruments included the Parental Self-Efficacy for Promoting Healthy Physical Activity and Dietary Behaviors in Children Scale (PSEPAD), the Obesity Risk Scale (ORK-10), and the Adolescent Obesity Risk Scale (AORK). Analyses included frequencies, chi-square tests, Kappa coefficients, and logistic regressions. Results Parents were least accurate (35.9%) identifying child weight when selecting a picture (κ = -.028, p = .42). The pictorial and Likert method (κ = -.032, p = .37) showed parental agreement with child weight was not significantly better than chance. Statistically, a significant agreement was found in the weight-reporting method (κ = .21). Two of the three HBM-related measures were significantly related to accurate classification. Logistic regression showed child sex, PSEPAD scores, and ORK-10 scores were statistically significant predictors in the Likert method. The model had no statistical significance for the pictorial or weight-reporting method. Conclusion Results indicate parents support intervening if aware of child weight problems. However, parents do not accurately recognize healthy versus unhealthy weights and report that health providers are not informing them of weight deviations. Further, important relationships between the HBM variables were identified. Results show barriers (self-efficacy) mediate the impact of perceived severity (knowledge) regarding the parental ability to assess child weight accurately. These relationships and incorporation of the HBM principles of barriers and severity into prevention/intervention strategies need further exploration.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Seham Elmrayed ◽  
Tanis Fenton ◽  
Amy Metcalfe ◽  
Darren Brenner

Abstract Background Numerous studies indicated that infants born small-for-gestational-age (SGA) are at higher risk of overweight. However, the association between SGA and overweight may be due to overcontrolling for body size. This study aimed to analyze the effect of controlling for child’s weight and height in the association between SGA and overweight in children born preterm. Methods Data were obtained from the Preterm Infant Multicenter Growth Study (n = 1089). The association between SGA and overweight at 36 months corrected age (CA) was analyzed using logistic regression models: 1) crude, 2) adjusted for baseline covariates, 3) adjusted for baselines covariates with additional adjustments separately for child’s weight and height at 21 months CA. Marginal structural models (MSM) with stabilized inverse probability weights were used to estimate the direct effect of SGA on overweight. Results The crude and adjusted models yielded a null association (OR, 95% CI: 0.88, 0.26-2.96; 0.95, 0.28-3.29). Adjusting for later height reversed the effect (OR, 95% CI: 2.31, 0.52-10.26), and adjusting for later weight reversed the effect and provided a significant association (OR, 95% CI: 6.60, 1.10-37.14). The MSMs with height and weight considered as mediators indicated no direct effect of SGA on overweight (OR, 95% CI: 0.83, 0.14-5.01; 0.71, 0.18-2.81). Conclusions Overcontrolling for body size can falsely induce an association between SGA and overweight. Key messages Mediators should not be treated as confounders.


Author(s):  
Lilac Lev-Ari ◽  
Ada H. Zohar ◽  
Rachel Bachner-Melman ◽  
Auriane Totah Hanhart

This study assessed the relationships between parents’ retrospective recollections of their mothers’ child feeding practices (CFP), current disordered eating (DE) and current CFP (how they now feed their children). 174 Israeli parents (136 mothers, 38 fathers; 40.1 ± 6.9 years of age) of children between the ages of 2 and 18, living at home, completed questionnaires online assessing demographics, retrospective recollections of the CFP that their mothers used when they were children, current CFP and current DE. Specific aspects of retrospectively recalled maternal CFP were significantly associated with the same aspects of current CFP. Current DE mediated the association between retrospectively recalled maternal CFP and current CFP and moderated the association between current concern about child’s weight and pressure for child to eat. Results highlight that the way adults pass on their feeding practices to their children is strongly influenced by their childhood recollections of their mothers’ concern about their weight, pressure for them to eat or restriction of their food intake. People often strive to behave differently from their parents, especially in the realm of food and eating. However, our findings suggest that parental CFP can become entrenched and can be passed on to our children.


Aquichan ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-13
Author(s):  
Yolanda Flores-Peña ◽  
Hermelinda Avila-Alpirez

Objectives: To associate the maternal perception of the child’s weight (MPCW) and the child’s nutritional status. To describe child’s lifestyle behavior problems (CLBPs) and maternal self-efficacy (SE) to deal with them, as well as to verify differences according to children with and without overweight-obesity (OW-OB) and MPCW. Material and methods: There was participation of 274 dyads (mother-preschool child). MPCW was assessed through words and images. The mothers answered the Lifestyle Behaviour Checklist. The child’s weight and height were measured. Results: 18.8 % (n = 13) of the mothers of children with OW-OB and 78.8 % (n = 160) of the mothers of children without OW-OB obtained adequate MPCW values through words (X2 = 77.759; DoF = 1; p < .001). It was identified that the mothers of children with OW-OB reported more CLBPs and less SE. When the child’s OW-OB is perceived through words, there are more CLBPs (F = 17.041; p = .001) and less SE (U = 1,118; p = .015). Conclusions: Inadequate MPCW was predominant in mothers of children with OW-OB. When OW-OB is perceived, there are more CLBPs and fewer SE. It is recommended to promote adequate MPCW, particularly in mothers of children with OW-OB. Images assist in the identification of the child’s OW-OB more than to classify it into a category.


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