
@article{ref1,
title="Agreement with satisfaction in adolescent body size between female caregivers and teens from a low-income African-American community",
journal="Journal of pediatric psychology",
year="2007",
author="Mitola, Andrea L. and Papas, Mia A. and Le, Katherine and Fusillo, Lauren and Black, Maureen M.",
volume="32",
number="1",
pages="42-51",
abstract="OBJECTIVE: To describe body size satisfaction and agreement among low-income, urban, African-American adolescents, and female caregivers. METHODS: Two hundred and fifteen adolescent-caregiver pairs completed measures of demographics, anthropometrics, and body size satisfaction. RESULTS: Adolescent-caregiver agreement on body size satisfaction varied by body mass index (BMI) category. Among normal weight adolescents, 61% of adolescent-caregivers agreed that current body size was ideal. Among adolescents at risk for overweight, 38% of adolescent-caregivers agreed that current body size was ideal, and 38% were discordant with adolescents wanting to be thinner and caregivers satisfied with current body size. Among overweight adolescents, adolescent-caregiver agreement was 67%; 52% agreed the adolescent should be thinner and 15% agreed current body size was ideal. CONCLUSIONS: Body size satisfaction is related to BMI category for adolescents and caregivers, but adolescents have a lower threshold. Encouraging caregivers to elicit their adolescents' views on body size satisfaction may enable caregivers to support their adolescents in addressing weight-related issues.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0146-8693",
doi="10.1093/jpepsy/jsl004",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsl004"
}