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Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate Researcher University of Florida Gainesville, FL
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Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Mar 29, 2015

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Page 1: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African

American College Women

Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHAAssociate Professor

Jennifer R. BondsUndergraduate Researcher

University of Florida Gainesville, FL

Page 2: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Obesity Prevalence

Obesity has doubled among American adults since 1980

African Americans have higher rates of obesity and weight related diseases

African American women have a higher rate of overweight and obesity than African American men

Page 3: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Obesity Prevalence

In 1999, the greatest increase was among young adults ages 18 to 29In 1997, one in five college students was overweight One third of African American college students were overweight in 1995African American female students were more likely to be overweight than their White and Hispanic counterparts

Page 4: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Goals

To assess obesity status and body satisfaction among African American college females

To examine differences in these variables between a predominately white university and a historically black college and university (HBCU)

Page 5: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Methods and ProceduresConvenient sample

402 undergraduate women of African descent

Two public universities in Florida University of FloridaFlorida A&M University (HBCU)

Self-administered surveyIRB approval from both campusesRecruited from sororities, campus organizations, and various places frequented by studentsStudents received a cup as an incentive

Page 6: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

School Characteristics UF

48,765 students 7.4% African American/Black

FAMU 13, 067 students 93.4% African American/Black

Both schools offer doctoral program

Page 7: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) 135 typically small

undergraduate institutions Produce 40 percent of this

country’s Black graduates Most located in the South

Page 8: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

DemographicsUF FAMU

Age 19.94±1.55 20.92±2.56**

GPA 3.14±0.43* 2.99±0.47

Hrs Worked 16.18±8.33 24.90±9.77**

Organizations 2.82±1.92** 1.89±1.92

*p <.05; **p <.0001

Page 9: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Academic Classification by School

9%5%

34%

18%

36% 36%

21%

41%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

45%

Fresh Soph Junior Seniors

UF

FAMU

Page 10: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Housing 55% off-campus apartments with roommates 26% lived in the dorms 13% lived alone in off-campus apartments 6% lived at home with relatives. Students at the FAMU were significantly more

likely to live at home with relatives, live alone off campus, and live with roommates off campus, while students at the UF were significantly more likely to live in the dorms (p<.0001).

Page 11: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Housing by School

2%

39%

10%

49%

11% 13%16%

60%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

70%

Home On Campus Apt (Alone) Apt (Others)

UF

FAMU

Page 12: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Weight Status in College 51% gained weight 24% lost weight 26% stayed the same Students at FAMU were

(significantly) more likely to report weight gain in college (p<.01)

Page 13: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMIBMI were calculated based on self-reported weight and height

Everyone 25.24±5.56 (overweight)FAMU 25.62±6.00 (overweight)

UF 24.89±5.10 (normal, high end)

There was no significant difference between schools on BMI

Page 14: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI Classification of Respondents

BMI Class

56% Healthy 18.5-24.9 25% Overweight 25-29.9 17% Obese ≥30 2% Underweight <18.5

Page 15: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Academic Classification

26.03

24.19

24.97

26.20

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

1st Year 2nd Year 3rd Year 4th Year

1st Year

2nd Year

3rd Year

4th Year

Page 16: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Housing

BMI varied significantly by HousingAt home 27.83±8.20 (overweight)**Apt, alone 27.719±6.56 (overweight)**Apt, others 24.62±4.76 (normal, high end)On campus 24.61±4.96 (normal, high end)

**p<.0001

Page 17: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Housing

27.83

24.61

27.71

24.62

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

At Home On Campus Apt (Alone) Apt (Others)

At Home

On Campus

Apt (Alone)

Apt (Others)

Page 18: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Weight PerceptionBMI varied significantly by weight perception Respondents described their weight based on five categories

UnderweightJust rightSlightly overweightVery overweightExtremely overweight

No significant difference by school

Page 19: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Weight Perception

19.3022.19

26.73

34.8338.92

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

45

Under JustRight

SlightlyOver

VeryOver

ExtremeOver

Under

Just Right

Slightly Over

Very Over

Extreme Over

Page 20: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI and Weight Satisfaction Respondents also were asked to rate their level of

satisfaction with their weight. 37% were satisfied/very satisfied with their

weight, 36% were somewhat satisfied, and 27% were dissatisfied/very dissatisfied with their weight.

Weight satisfaction did not vary by school (p>.05).

However, ANOVA revealed that BMI varied significantly by weight satisfaction (p<.0001).

Those who were dissatisfied were in the overweight or obese category and those who were satisfied were in the healthy range

Page 21: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Weight Satisfaction

21.89 22.6825.00

29.0530.97

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Very Sat Satis Some Sat Dissat Very Dis

Very Sat

Satis

Some Sat

Dissat

Very Dis

Page 22: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Thoughts about Weight Respondents were asked how often they

thought about their weight. 13% a few times a day 38% almost everyday 27% a few times a month 22% rarely/never think There was no significant difference by

school (p>.05). However, ANOVA revealed that BMI varied

by thoughts about weight (p<.0001).

Page 23: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

BMI by Thoughts of Weight

27.94 26.9523.87

22.18

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Few TimesDay

AlmostDaily

Few TimesMonth

RerelyNever

Few Times Day

Almost Daily

Few Times Month

Rerely Never

Page 24: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Conclusion This study found few significant

differences in weight status and body satisfaction between African American college females attending a HBCU and a PWU.

Differences were due mainly to the demographic characteristics of the samples, particularly housing location.

Page 25: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Conclusion Mean BMI for participants was 25.24±5.56,

thus classifying them as being overweight.

However, further analysis by BMI category showed the majority (55%) had BMI in the healthy range. But, 25% of the respondent could be classified as overweight and 17% could be classified as obese

27% were very dissatisfied/dissatisfied and this was correlated with high BMI

Page 26: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Implications for College Health Consider the housing

arrangements, i.e. whether the off-campus students live alone, at home with relatives, or with roommates.

Need to specifically target students who live off campus

Page 27: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Implications for College Health Weight management programs

should focus on maintaining a healthy weight throughout the entire college career, not just during the freshmen year.

Page 28: Obesity Status and Body Satisfaction of African American College Women Delores C. S. James, PhD, RD, LD, FASHA Associate Professor Jennifer R. Bonds Undergraduate.

Study Limitations Convenient sample Self-selection bias Self reported weight and height BMI was used as the sole measure to

classify participants’ weight Small sample size. Larger sample may

have found more differences between schools