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Journal Article

Citation

Lanza HI, Echols L, Graham SH. J. Pediatr. Psychol. 2013; 38(4): 376-386.

Affiliation

Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and Department of Education, University of California, Los Angeles.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/jpepsy/jss130

PMID

23248348

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To examine whether deviation from one's ethnic group norm on body mass index (BMI) was related to psychosocial maladjustment among early adolescent girls, and whether specific ethnic groups were more vulnerable to maladjustment. METHODS: Hierarchical regression analyses were conducted on self- and peer-report measures from an ethnically diverse sample of sixth-grade girls (N = 2,636). RESULTS: African Americans and Latinas had a higher mean BMI than Asians and Whites. As deviation from their ethnic group BMI norm increased, girls reported greater social anxiety, depression, peer victimization, and lower self-worth, and had lower peer-reported social status. Associations were specific to girls deviating toward obesity status. Ethnic differences revealed that Asian girls deviating toward obesity status were particularly vulnerable to internalizing symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Emotional maladjustment may be more severe among overweight/obese girls whose ethnic group BMI norm is furthest away from overweight/obesity status. Implications for obesity work with ethnically diverse adolescents were discussed.


Language: en

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