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Controlled Study of Critical Parent and Family Factors in the Obesigenic Environment
Author(s) -
Zeller Meg H.,
ReiterPurtill Jennifer,
Modi Avani C.,
Gutzwiller Joeanne,
Vannatta Kathryn,
Davies W. Hobart
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.438
H-Index - 199
eISSN - 1930-739X
pISSN - 1930-7381
DOI - 10.1038/oby.2007.517
Subject(s) - overweight , psychosocial , medicine , distress , demographics , checklist , obesity , clinical psychology , logistic regression , demography , psychology , psychiatry , sociology , cognitive psychology
Objective: Critical gaps remain in our understanding of the obesigenic family environment. This study examines parent and family characteristics among obese youth presenting for treatment in a clinic setting. Research Methods and Procedures: Families of 78 obese youth (BMI z ‐score = 2.4; age, 8 to 16 years; 59% girls; 49% African‐American) were compared with 71 non‐overweight (BMI z ‐score = −0.02) demographically matched comparisons. Parents completed measures assessing family demographics, psychological distress (Symptom Checklist 90‐Revised), and family functioning both broadly (Family Environment Scale: Conflicted, Support, Control) and at mealtimes (About Your Child's Eating‐Revised: Mealtime Challenges, Positive Mealtime Interaction). Height and weight were obtained from all participants. Results: Compared with mothers and fathers of non‐overweight youth, parents of obese youth had significantly higher BMIs ( p < 0.001). Mothers of obese youth reported significantly greater psychological distress ( p < 0.01), higher family conflict ( p < 0.05), and more mealtime challenges ( p < 0.01). Less positive family mealtime interactions were reported by both mothers ( p < 0.01) and fathers ( p < 0.05) of obese youth. These group differences did not vary by child sex or race. Logistic regression analyses indicated that maternal distress and mealtime challenges discriminated between obese and non‐overweight youth after controlling for maternal BMI. Family conflict was explained, in part, by maternal distress. Discussion: Obese youth who present for treatment in a clinic setting are characterized by psychosocial factors at the parent and family level that differ from non‐overweight youth. These data are critical because they identify factors that may be serving as barriers to a family's or youth's ability to implement healthy lifestyle behaviors but that are potentially modifiable.