Certain Weight Control Behaviors May Precipitate Obesity Among Adolescent Girls, Says New Study: A Parent's Weight May Also Play a Role in Adolescent Weight Gain

2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
2016 ◽  
Vol 21 (12) ◽  
pp. 2955-2965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shawn N Katterman ◽  
Meghan L Butryn ◽  
Megan M Hood ◽  
Michael R Lowe

Experimental research is needed to examine whether weight monitoring impacts weight and whether it has unintended harmful effects. This study randomly assigned 49 first-year university women (body mass index: 20–30 kg/m2) to daily weight monitoring or a control condition and measured weight, mood, body dissatisfaction, and unhealthy weight control behaviors at baseline and 8 weeks, and weight at 20-week follow-up. No harmful effects of daily weighing were detected; acceptability and adherence were high. Weight monitoring did not impact weight; both groups showed little weight gain. Results suggest that weight monitoring has minimal harmful effects and may be useful for preventing weight gain.


2004 ◽  
Vol 104 (6) ◽  
pp. 913-920 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dianne Neumark-Sztainer ◽  
Peter J. Hannan ◽  
Mary Story ◽  
Cheryl L. Perry

Author(s):  
Sara-Sadat Hoseini-Esfidarjani ◽  
Reza Negarandeh ◽  
Leila Janani

AbstractObjectivesWeight control behavior is a strategy for weight loss or weight gains that range from healthy to unhealthy. This study is aimed to determine the prevalence of weight control behaviors and their related factors in adolescent girls in Tehran.MethodsAdolescent girls in the last grade of high school (n=491) that were selected by a multi-stage sampling method completed a cross-sectional survey (2018) in Tehran city in Iran. Data were collected using questionnaires (standard and researcher-made) by the self-report method and analyzed using descriptive and inferential statistics, including Chi-square, independent t-test, and logistic regression.Results17.5% of adolescents had healthy, 60.6% had unhealthy, 15.8% had extreme unhealthy weight control behaviors, and 6.1% had no weight control behaviors. 74.8% of adolescents were in the normal body mass index (BMI) percentile. Unhealthy weight control behaviors were observed more than healthy behaviors at all BMI levels. Weight control behaviors had significant relationships with weight control intention (p=0.005), family (p=0.016) and peers (p=0.011) encouragement to weight control, engagement of relatives in weight control behaviors (p=0.016), anxiety (p<0.001), and age (p=0.030). BMI has a positive correlation with body weight satisfaction (p<0.001) and body weight perception (p<0.001). The results of logistic regression showed that increasing anxiety score can increase the possibility of engaging in unhealthy weight control behaviors (odd ratio=1.086, p=0.006).ConclusionsConsidering that a significant percentage of adolescents have unhealthy and extreme unhealthy weight control behaviors, and some of these behaviors leave irreversible effects on the health of this age group, design, and implementation of educational programs to prevent such behaviors seem imperative.


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