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Who seeks bariatric surgery? Psychosocial functioning among adolescent candidates, other treatment‐seeking adolescents with obesity and healthy controls
Author(s) -
Call C. C.,
Devlin M. J.,
Fennoy I.,
Zitsman J. L.,
Walsh B. T.,
Sysko R.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
clinical obesity
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.64
H-Index - 12
eISSN - 1758-8111
pISSN - 1758-8103
DOI - 10.1111/cob.12211
Subject(s) - psychosocial , medicine , anxiety , obesity , quality of life (healthcare) , body mass index , depression (economics) , adolescent obesity , eating disorders , impulsivity , clinical psychology , psychiatry , overweight , nursing , economics , macroeconomics
Summary Limited data are available on the characteristics of adolescents with obesity who seek bariatric surgery. Existing data suggest that adolescent surgery candidates have a higher body mass index ( BMI ) than comparison adolescents with obesity, but the limited findings regarding psychosocial functioning are mixed. This study aimed to compare BMI and psychosocial functioning among adolescent bariatric surgery candidates, outpatient medical‐treatment‐seeking adolescents with obesity (receiving lifestyle modification), and adolescents in the normal‐weight range. All adolescents completed self‐report measures of impulsivity, delay discounting, depression, anxiety, stress, eating pathology, family functioning and quality of life, and had their height and weight measured. Adolescent surgical candidates had higher BMIs than both comparison groups. Surgical candidates did not differ from medical‐treatment‐seeking adolescents with obesity on any measure of psychosocial functioning, but both groups of adolescents with obesity reported greater anxiety and eating pathology and poorer quality of life than normal‐weight adolescents. Quality of life no longer differed across groups after controlling for BMI , suggesting that it is highly related to weight status. Adolescents with obesity may experience greater anxiety, eating pathology, and quality of life impairments than their peers in the normal‐weight range regardless of whether they are seeking surgery or outpatient medical treatment. Clinical implications and directions for future research are discussed.

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