4.3 Article

Adolescent Overweight, Obesity and Chronic Disease-Related Health Practices: Mediation by Body Image

期刊

OBESITY FACTS
卷 7, 期 1, 页码 1-14

出版社

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000357601

关键词

Adolescents; Obesity; Body image; Chronic disease-related health practices

资金

  1. NIH, Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development [N01-HD-5-3401]
  2. Maternal and Child Health Bureau of the Health Resources and Services Administration

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Background/Aims: To examine whether body image mediates the association between overweight/obesity and chronic disease-related health practices (CDRHP), including lack of physical activity (PA), infrequent breakfast consumption (IBC), screen-based media use (SBM), and smoking. Methods: The 2006 Health Behaviors in School-Age Children survey was administered to a nationally representative sample of US students (n = 8,028) in grades 6-10 (mean age = 14.3 years). Outcome variables included self-reported measures of PA, SBM, IBC, and smoking. Body image was assessed with 5 items from the Body Investment Scale (alpha = 0.87) asking for agreement/disagreement with statements about one's body. Stratifying on gender, an initial regression model estimated the association between overweight/obesity and CDRHP. Mediation models that included body image were then compared to the initial model to determine the role of body image in the relationship between overweight/obesity and CDRHP. Results: Among boys, body image mediated the relationships of overweight/obesity with SBM, and of obesity with IBC. Among girls, it mediated the relationships of obesity with PA, IBC, and smoking, and of overweight with SBM. Conclusion: As the prevalence of overweight/obesity among adolescent boys and girls remains high, efforts to improve their body image could result in less frequent engagement in CDRHP. (C) 2013 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg

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