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Fear of obesity among adolescent girls.
Pediatrics. 1989 Mar; 83(3):393-8.Ped

Abstract

The perceptions concerning weight, dieting practices, and nutrition of 326 adolescent girls attending an upper middle-class parochial high school were studied in relation to their body weight. Underweight or overweight students were those with greater than 10% body weight differential for height. The high school students reported an exaggerated concern with obesity regardless of their body weight or nutrition knowledge. Underweight, normal weight, and overweight girls were dieting to lose weight and reported frequent self-weighing practices. As many as 51% (n = 60) of the underweight adolescents described themselves as extremely fearful of being overweight and 36% (n = 43) were preoccupied with body fat. A distorted perception of ideal body weight was documented, particularly among the underweight students; the greater the underestimation of perceived ideal body weight, the greater the actual deficit in ideal body weight for height of the students (r = .73; P less than .001). Normal weight and overweight girls had better concordance between their actual and perceived ideal body weight for height. The frequency of bingeing and vomiting behaviors was similar among the three weight categories. The data suggest that fear of obesity and inappropriate eating behaviors are pervasive among adolescent girls regardless of body weight or nutrition knowledge.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Department of Pediatrics, North Shore University Hospital, Manhasset, New York 11030.No affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

2919143

Citation

Moses, N, et al. "Fear of Obesity Among Adolescent Girls." Pediatrics, vol. 83, no. 3, 1989, pp. 393-8.
Moses N, Banilivy MM, Lifshitz F. Fear of obesity among adolescent girls. Pediatrics. 1989;83(3):393-8.
Moses, N., Banilivy, M. M., & Lifshitz, F. (1989). Fear of obesity among adolescent girls. Pediatrics, 83(3), 393-8.
Moses N, Banilivy MM, Lifshitz F. Fear of Obesity Among Adolescent Girls. Pediatrics. 1989;83(3):393-8. PubMed PMID: 2919143.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Fear of obesity among adolescent girls. AU - Moses,N, AU - Banilivy,M M, AU - Lifshitz,F, PY - 1989/3/1/pubmed PY - 1989/3/1/medline PY - 1989/3/1/entrez SP - 393 EP - 8 JF - Pediatrics JO - Pediatrics VL - 83 IS - 3 N2 - The perceptions concerning weight, dieting practices, and nutrition of 326 adolescent girls attending an upper middle-class parochial high school were studied in relation to their body weight. Underweight or overweight students were those with greater than 10% body weight differential for height. The high school students reported an exaggerated concern with obesity regardless of their body weight or nutrition knowledge. Underweight, normal weight, and overweight girls were dieting to lose weight and reported frequent self-weighing practices. As many as 51% (n = 60) of the underweight adolescents described themselves as extremely fearful of being overweight and 36% (n = 43) were preoccupied with body fat. A distorted perception of ideal body weight was documented, particularly among the underweight students; the greater the underestimation of perceived ideal body weight, the greater the actual deficit in ideal body weight for height of the students (r = .73; P less than .001). Normal weight and overweight girls had better concordance between their actual and perceived ideal body weight for height. The frequency of bingeing and vomiting behaviors was similar among the three weight categories. The data suggest that fear of obesity and inappropriate eating behaviors are pervasive among adolescent girls regardless of body weight or nutrition knowledge. SN - 0031-4005 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/2919143/Fear_of_obesity_among_adolescent_girls_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -