Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
3814151 Patient Education and Counseling 2014 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectiveWe tested the association between child and parental health literacy (HL) and odds of child and adolescent obesity.MethodsWe conducted an anonymous cross-sectional survey of a convenience sample of English-speaking child-parent dyads. Newest Vital Sign (NVS) measured HL. We used multivariable logistic regression to test adjusted association between child and parental NVS and obesity. Analyses were stratified for school-aged children (aged 7–11) vs. adolescents (aged 12–19).ResultsWe surveyed 239 child-parent dyads. Median child age was 11 [inter-quartile range 9–13]; 123 (51%) were male; 84% Medicaid recipients; 27% obese. For children, the odds of obesity [adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval)] decreased with higher parent NVS [0.75 (0.56,1.00)] and increased with parent obesity [2.53 (1.08,5.94)]. For adolescents, odds of obesity were higher for adolescents with the lowest category of NVS [5.00 (1.26, 19.8)] and older parental age [1.07 (1.01,1.14)] and lower for Medicaid recipients [0.21 (0.06,0.78)] and higher parental education [0.38 (0.22,0.63)].ConclusionObesity in school-aged children is associated with parental factors (obesity, parental HL); obesity in adolescents is strongly associated with the adolescent's HL.Practice implicationsStrategies to prevent and treat obesity should consider limited HL of parents for child obesity and of adolescents for adolescent obesity.

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