Gender and race/ethnic differences in inaccurate weight perceptions among U.S. adolescents

Citation

Martin, Molly A.; Frisco, Michelle L.; & May, Ashleigh L. (2009). Gender and race/ethnic differences in inaccurate weight perceptions among U.S. adolescents. Women's Health Issues. vol. 19 (5) pp. 292-299 , PMCID: PMC2764324

Abstract

Purpose
Inaccurate weight perceptions may lead to unhealthy weight control practices among normal weight adolescents and to a greater risk of adult obesity and related morbidities for overweight adolescents. To examine which U.S. adolescents are at risk of these outcomes, we examine gender and racial/ethnic differences in weight perception inaccuracy. This is the first study of weight perception inaccuracy to include Latino/a and Asian American adolescents.
Methods
Among the 12,789 Wave II participants of the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, we estimate multivariate models that reveal how gender, race/ethnicity, and clinical weight categories predict weight perception inaccuracy.
Results
Relative to boys, girls have lower odds of underestimating their weight and greater odds of overestimating their weight. In particular, among overweight and obese adolescents, girls are more accurate than boys, but among normal weight adolescents, boys are more accurate. Compared with Whites, African Americans are more likely to underestimate their weight, particularly among overweight girls and obese boys. Overall and particularly among girls and normal weight adolescents, African Americans are less likely to overestimate their weight than their White counterparts. Finally, Asian American girls are more likely to underestimate their weight than White girls.
Conclusion
These findings have important implications for identifying and intervening with adolescents at the greatest risk of long-term weight problems, weight-related morbidity, and unhealthy weight control practices.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016%2Fj.whi.2009.05.003

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Women's Health Issues

Author(s)

Martin, Molly A.
Frisco, Michelle L.
May, Ashleigh L.

Year Published

2009

Volume Number

19

Issue Number

5

Pages

292-299

ISSN/ISBN

1049-3867

DOI

10.1016/j.whi.2009.05.003

PMCID

PMC2764324

Reference ID

1024