News Health Perception of body weight changes may not tackle obesity; finds study

Perception of body weight changes may not tackle obesity; finds study

In the study, the researchers found underestimation of weight status increased, and overestimation of weight status decreased over time among both sexes, with stronger trends for girls.

Body Weight Changes Image Source : FREEPIKA study has found that body weight changes perception may not tackle obesity.

A study published in the journal Child and Adolescent Obesity has found that the shifting trends in body weight perception, where fewer people now perceive themselves as overweight, could reduce the effectiveness of public health interventions aimed at tackling obesity, finds. The team involved 745,000 adolescent participants from 41 countries across Europe and North America. The study has identified an increase in the number of teenagers who underestimate their body weight, making them feel it is unnecessary to lose excess weight and lead a healthy life. The findings also demonstrated a noticeable decrease in those who overestimate their weight.

The lead author, Anouk Geraets, from the Department of Social Sciences, at the University of Luxembourg said, "During this impressionable age, body weight perception may influence a young person's lifestyle choices, such as the amount and types of food they eat and their exercise habits."

"So it's concerning that we're seeing a trend where fewer adolescents perceive themselves as being overweight -- as this could undermine ongoing efforts to tackle increasing levels of obesity in this age group. Young people who underestimate their weight and therefore do not consider themselves to be overweight may not feel they need to lose excess weight and, as a result, they may make unhealthy lifestyle choices," Geraets said.

A person's perception of their body weight may not accurately reflect their actual weight. A discrepancy in body weight perception (BWP) may either be an underestimation (where actual weight is higher than perceived weight) or an overestimation (where actual weight is lower than perceived weight).

In the study, the researchers found underestimation of weight status increased, and overestimation of weight status decreased over time among both sexes, with stronger trends for girls. Correct weight perception increased over time among girls, while it decreased among boys.

The team stated that the increased underestimation and decreased overestimation of weight status over time for girls may be explained by the emergence of an athletic and strong body, as a new contemporary body ideal for both sexes.

Geraets said that the study has clinical and public health implications. "The increase in correct weight perception and the decrease in overestimation may have a positive effect on unnecessary and unhealthy weight loss behaviours among adolescents, while the increase in underestimation might indicate the need for interventions to strengthen correct weight perception," he added.

(With IANS Inputs)