Body size reference norms and subjective weight status: A gender and life course approach

Citation

Wedow, Robbee; Masters, Ryan K.; Mollborn, Stefanie; Schnabel, Landon; & Boardman, Jason D. (2018). Body size reference norms and subjective weight status: A gender and life course approach. Social Forces. vol. 96 (3) pp. 1377-1409

Abstract

This paper uses data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health) to describe county-level variation in norms regarding physical weight among adolescents in the United States. We demonstrate that regardless of one's physical size, those residing in counties with a heavier weight norm are significantly less likely to see themselves as overweight than those residing in counties with a light weight norm. We further show that the local weight norm during adolescence (Wave 1) is associated with individuals' weight perceptions through adolescence and into young adulthood (Wave 4), though these associations attenuate in strength as respondents age. Our results suggest that weight norms have a stronger influence on weight perceptions among women compared to men, and that the role of gender is particularly important during adolescence. We encourage life course researchers to consider the normative health environment during adolescence as an important context for understanding disparities in health and health lifestyles as people age.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093%2Fsf%2Fsox073

Notes

Export Date: 4 June 2018

Reference Type

Journal Article

Journal Title

Social Forces

Author(s)

Wedow, Robbee
Masters, Ryan K.
Mollborn, Stefanie
Schnabel, Landon
Boardman, Jason D.

Year Published

2018

Volume Number

96

Issue Number

3

Pages

1377-1409

DOI

10.1093/sf/sox073

Reference ID

8509