Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?

The prevalence of overweight and obesity is rising rapidly in many countries, including South Korea. The present study examined the association between weight perception and self-rated health, independent of body weight status, as well as how weight status and perceived weight status intersect and r...

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Main Author: Soyoung Kwon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIMS Press 2017-11-01
Series:AIMS Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1702/fulltext.html
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spelling doaj-9871b1287efd4e678f15f7e5d84e93be2020-11-24T20:43:29ZengAIMS PressAIMS Public Health2327-89942017-11-014551352510.3934/publichealth.2017.5.513publichealth-04-00513Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?Soyoung Kwon0Department of Psychology & Sociology, Texas A & M University- Kingsville, 700 University Blvd, MSC 177, Kingsville, TX 78363, USAThe prevalence of overweight and obesity is rising rapidly in many countries, including South Korea. The present study examined the association between weight perception and self-rated health, independent of body weight status, as well as how weight status and perceived weight status intersect and relate to the self-rated health among adults in South Korea. Data were from 722 men and 800 women in 2010 Korean General Social Survey. Results showed that over half of Korean adults perceived their weight incorrectly with a fair agreement (men ƙ = 0.36; women ƙ = 0.31). Multivariate analyses indicated that poor/fair self-rated health had no significant association with body weight status, measured by self-reported weight and height, but it had a significant association with perceived weight status in men. The intersectionality analysis in which weight status and weight perceptions were cross-classified indicated that both measured and perceived weight status should be taken into account for the indicator of self-rated health as well as for better understanding of weight-related health consequences.http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1702/fulltext.htmlbody mass indexperceived weightintersectionalityself-rated healthKorean adults
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Soyoung Kwon
spellingShingle Soyoung Kwon
Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
AIMS Public Health
body mass index
perceived weight
intersectionality
self-rated health
Korean adults
author_facet Soyoung Kwon
author_sort Soyoung Kwon
title Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
title_short Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
title_full Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
title_fullStr Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
title_full_unstemmed Body Mass Index, Perceived Weight, and Self-Rated Health among South Korean Adults: Conjoint Effect on Health?
title_sort body mass index, perceived weight, and self-rated health among south korean adults: conjoint effect on health?
publisher AIMS Press
series AIMS Public Health
issn 2327-8994
publishDate 2017-11-01
description The prevalence of overweight and obesity is rising rapidly in many countries, including South Korea. The present study examined the association between weight perception and self-rated health, independent of body weight status, as well as how weight status and perceived weight status intersect and relate to the self-rated health among adults in South Korea. Data were from 722 men and 800 women in 2010 Korean General Social Survey. Results showed that over half of Korean adults perceived their weight incorrectly with a fair agreement (men ƙ = 0.36; women ƙ = 0.31). Multivariate analyses indicated that poor/fair self-rated health had no significant association with body weight status, measured by self-reported weight and height, but it had a significant association with perceived weight status in men. The intersectionality analysis in which weight status and weight perceptions were cross-classified indicated that both measured and perceived weight status should be taken into account for the indicator of self-rated health as well as for better understanding of weight-related health consequences.
topic body mass index
perceived weight
intersectionality
self-rated health
Korean adults
url http://www.aimspress.com/aimsph/article/1702/fulltext.html
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