Family history and parental recognition of overweight in Croatian children
Autor: | Ivana Pavić Šimetin, Iva Pejnović Franelić, Nina Petričević, Marija Posavec, Zrinka Puharić |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2012 |
Předmět: |
Male
Parents Pediatrics medicine.medical_specialty Heredity Croatia Cross-sectional study Overweight Obesity Child Parental perception Family history Body Mass Index medicine Humans Weight Perception business.industry nutritional and metabolic diseases Odds ratio medicine.disease Cross-Sectional Studies Logistic Models Child Preschool Pediatrics Perinatology and Child Health Cohort Female medicine.symptom Underweight business Body mass index Demography |
Popis: | The aim of this study was to evaluate the perception of parents on the weight status of their offspring, particularly in relation to a family history of obesity and obesity-related illnesses. A cross-sectional study of 1, 068 child–parent dyads sampled at school entry health examination was conducted (median age of the child 6.75 years, range 5.7–8.3 years, 50.3 % males). The parental perception of the weight status of their child was compared to the body mass index (BMI, kilogram per square meter), calculated from measured weight and height. Weight status (underweight, normal, overweight, and obese) was defined using the United States Centers for Disease Control and Prevention BMI for age reference charts. Backward multiple linear regression analysis was used to determine possible predictors of parental misclassification of overweight/obese children. Among this cohort of children, 12 % were overweight, 10.2 % obese, and 8.1 % were underweight. Only 24.8 % of obese children and 2.2 % of overweight children were considered “overweight” by their parents. A positive family history was not significantly associated with parental recognition of overweight. Parental misperception of overweight/obese children as being normal was related to the child BMI z-score (odds ratio (OR) 0.036 ; 0.012–0.111) and diabetes in family history (OR 3.187 ; 1.207–8.413). Conclusion: The majority of parents did not perceive their overweight/obese children as overweight. As having an obese family member or one who has suffered from an obesity-related illness does not increase the parental ability to recognize overweight in their children, strategies to increase public awareness about the importance of one's family medical history are needed. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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