Professor Helen Truby |
Weight management intervention in overweight children does
not impact negatively on their body perception and satisfaction, according
research published last month in Appetite.
The Monash led longitudinal study investigated the changes
in body perception and satisfaction in overweight and obese children in a six
month weight management program delivered to parents.
“Childhood obesity affects both physical and psychological
health; and overweight children experience higher levels of body
dissatisfaction compared with their healthy weight counterparts,” said lead
author Professor Helen Truby, Head, Department of
Nutrition and Dietetics in the School
of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health.
“Until now there has been a lack of research on body
satisfaction in overweight children and how weight management interventions may
alter this over time.”
Importantly, negative body image is implicated in the
development of extreme dieting behaviours which can be the precursor of eating
disorders.
Professor Truby and her team also aimed to determine the construct
validity of the Children’s
Body Image Scale (CBIS) to measure body image and satisfaction in a purely
overweight or obese study sample.
Developed by Professor Truby, the CBIS is a widely used
pictorial scale that measures pre-adolescent children’s self-perception of
their body size and is now an internationally recognised outcome measure for
weight management studies in children.
“Our research shows for the first time that the CBIS is a
valid tool to measure body satisfaction longitudinally in overweight children,”
added Professor Truby.
“The results of our study also suggest that delivery of a
weight management program via parents has no negative effect on children’s body
satisfaction.”
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