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The Association Between Weight Perception and BMI: Report and Measurement Data from the Growing Up in Ireland Cohort Study of 9-year Olds

Overview
Specialty Endocrinology
Date 2016 Sep 28
PMID 27671034
Citations 6
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Abstract

Background: The gold standard for categorisation of weight status is clinically measured body mass index (BMI), but this is often not practical in large epidemiological studies.

Objectives: To determine if a child's weight perception or a mother's perception of a child's weight status is a viable alternative to measured height and weight in determining BMI classification. Secondary outcomes are to determine the influence of a mother's BMI on her ability to categorise the child's BMI and a child's ability to recognise his/her own BMI.

Methods: Cross-sectional analysis of the growing up in Ireland cohort study, a nationally representative cohort of 8568 9-year-old children. The variables considered for this analysis are the child's gender, BMI (International Obesity Taskforce grade derived from measured height and weight) and self-perceived weight status, and the mother's weight perception of the child, BMI (derived from measured height and weight) and self-perceived weight status. Cohen's weighted-kappa was used to evaluate the strength of the agreement between pairwise combinations of the BMI variables. Cumulative and adjacent categories logistic regression were used to predict how likely a person rates themselves as under, normal or overweight, based on explanatory variables.

Results: Mothers are more accurate at correctly classifying their child's BMI (κ=0.5; confidence intervals (CI) 0.38-0.51) than the children themselves (κ=0.25; CI 0.23-0.26). Overweight mothers are better raters of their child's BMI (κ=0.51; CI 0.49-0.54), compared with normal (κ=0.44; CI 0.41-0.47) or underweight mothers (κ=0.4; CI 0.22-0.58), regardless of whether the mother's BMI is derived from measured height and weight or self-perceived. The mother's perception of the child's weight status is not an influencing factor on the child's ability to correctly classify him/herself, but the child's self-perceived weight status influences the mother's ability to correctly classify the child.

Conclusions: A mother's BMI classification of her child is a viable alternative to BMI measurement in large epidemiological studies.

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Factors Influencing Parents' and Children's Misperception of Children's Weight Status: a Systematic Review of Current Research.

Blanchet R, Kengneson C, Bodnaruc A, Gunter A, Giroux I Curr Obes Rep. 2019; 8(4):373-412.

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Do mothers accurately identify their child's overweight/obesity status during early childhood? Evidence from a nationally representative cohort study.

Queally M, Doherty E, Matvienko-Sikar K, Toomey E, Cullinan J, Harrington J Int J Behav Nutr Phys Act. 2018; 15(1):56.

PMID: 29921288 PMC: 6006594. DOI: 10.1186/s12966-018-0688-y.


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