The global prevalence of childhood obesity is alarmingly high. Parents’ identification of their children as overweight is thought to be an important prerequisite to tackling childhood obesity, but recent findings suggest that such parental identification is counterintuitively associated with increased weight gain during childhood. One possibility is that parental identification of their child as being overweight results in that child viewing his or her body size negatively and attempting to lose weight, which eventually results in weight gain. We used data from two longitudinal cohort studies to examine the relation between children’s weight gain and their parents’ identification of them as being overweight. Across both studies, children wh...
excess weight as a health risk, knowledge of healthy eating habits, and recognition of obesity in th...
Objective: This study reported on correlates of parental perception of their child's weight status. ...
Introduction: Parents can act as important agents of change and support for healthy childhood growth...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Parents of children who are overweight often fail to accurately identify t...
Background and aims: Childhood obesity rate continues to grow in the UK with children from deprived ...
Background and aims: Childhood obesity rate continues to grow in the UK with children from deprived ...
Background: Treating overweight children may be more difficult when parents themselves do not correc...
Background: Treating overweight children may be more difficult when parents themselves do not correc...
Childhood obesity rates have risen dramatically in the past 50 years. Interest in the issue of obesi...
Background: Public health policies attempt to increase parental identification of child overweigh...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
IntroductionMany studies have found that parents of overweight children do not perceive their child ...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
<div><p>Objective</p><p>Recognising overweight and obesity is critical to prompting action, and cons...
excess weight as a health risk, knowledge of healthy eating habits, and recognition of obesity in th...
Objective: This study reported on correlates of parental perception of their child's weight status. ...
Introduction: Parents can act as important agents of change and support for healthy childhood growth...
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Parents of children who are overweight often fail to accurately identify t...
Background and aims: Childhood obesity rate continues to grow in the UK with children from deprived ...
Background and aims: Childhood obesity rate continues to grow in the UK with children from deprived ...
Background: Treating overweight children may be more difficult when parents themselves do not correc...
Background: Treating overweight children may be more difficult when parents themselves do not correc...
Childhood obesity rates have risen dramatically in the past 50 years. Interest in the issue of obesi...
Background: Public health policies attempt to increase parental identification of child overweigh...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
IntroductionMany studies have found that parents of overweight children do not perceive their child ...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
Background: Little is known about parental recognition of their child\u27s overweight status over ti...
<div><p>Objective</p><p>Recognising overweight and obesity is critical to prompting action, and cons...
excess weight as a health risk, knowledge of healthy eating habits, and recognition of obesity in th...
Objective: This study reported on correlates of parental perception of their child's weight status. ...
Introduction: Parents can act as important agents of change and support for healthy childhood growth...