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Parent : Views and Perceptions of Obese African-American Female Adolescents
Pratt, K., McRitchie, S., Collier, DN., Lutes, LD., & Sumner, S. (2015). Parent : Views and Perceptions of Obese African-American Female Adolescents. Journal of the National Medical Association, 107(2), 74-79. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0027-9684(15)30027-4
Our purpose was to evaluate the views of obese African-American (AA) female adolescents concerning parent and family factors relating to obesity and a healthy lifestyle. Obese AA female adolescents enrolled in a residential healthy lifestyle program completed inventories measuring family functioning and perceptions of parenting styles, and participated in focus groups to identify themes regarding parent and family involvement in healthy lifestyle change. The majority of participants' mothers were scored as "inductive/authoritative" and fathers were "indulgent". Mothers reportedly were seen as more likely to encourage dieting to control weight than fathers. Common themes of the focus groups included a desire for family involvement, identification of family behaviors that were supportive as well as those which were perceived as unhelpful. Though generalizability of these results is limited by a homogenous small sample size, our results suggest that obese adolescents seeking weight loss treatment desire significant family involvement in their efforts.