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Overweight Parents Misperceive Their Kids' Weights: Study

by VR Sreeraman on Mar 21 2009 3:24 PM

A new study has shown that parents are likely to misperceive their child's weight - especially those parents who are overweight themselves.

A new study has shown that parents are likely to misperceive their child's weight - especially those parents who are overweight themselves.

Looking at several studies that examine parental perceptions of childhood obesity generated from the United Kingdom, Australia, Italy, and the United States, Jessica Doolen, MSN, FNP, Patricia T. Alpert, DrPH, APN, FAANP, and Sally K. Miller, PhD, APN, FAANP, found that parents were more likely to misperceive their child's weight, regardless of the child's age.

Across the literature, mothers failed to accurately recognize the weight of their at-risk-for-overweight or overweight children.

In a comparison of two studies they examined, they found that in the UK only 1.9 percent of parents with children at risk for overweight and 17.1 percent of parents with overweight children accurately identified their child as being at risk for or overweight.

In another study, the researchers made note of an interesting finding in the study conducted in Westchester County, New York.

In that study, the parents who had concern for their child's excess weight, 76 percent thought this concern was similar to concerns about sunburn, while 67 percent found concerns about weight similar to prolonged television watching.

The researchers noted several common themes from their analyses. Parents' inability to recognize their child's risk for obesity was especially pronounced if the parents themselves were overweight.

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Also, children of more highly educated parents were less likely to be overweight or at risk. Cultural influences also affected parents' perceptions of children's weight, with black women being more satisfied with their larger size than white women.

A multitude of risk factors put children at risk for weight gain, and parental misperception may be one of them.

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"If parents do not recognize their child as at risk for overweight or overweight, they cannot intervene to diminish the risk factors for paediatric obesity and its related complications," the authors said.

This study is published in the March 2009 issue of the Journal of the American Academy of Nurse Practitioners.

Source-ANI
SRM


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