Exploring the Association Between Internalized Weight Bias and Mental Health among Canadian Adolescents.
PEDIATRIC OBESITY(2024)
Abstract
SummaryBackgroundInternalized weight bias (IWB) has been identified as a correlate of higher depressive and anxiety symptoms in adolescents with higher weights. However, there has been limited investigation into how IWB relates to positive mental health and whether these associations differ across genders.ObjectivesTo examine the associations between IWB and mental health (depression, anxiety, flourishing) in adolescents with higher weights, and to test the potential moderating role of gender.MethodsCanadian adolescents with higher weights (N = 7538, 60% boys, 36% girls, 4% gender diverse, ages 12–19) from the COMPASS study completed a survey during the 2021–2022 school year. Data were analysed using generalized linear models.ResultsHighest IWB and poorest mental health were noted within gender diverse adolescents, followed by girls then boys. Gender moderated the relationship between higher IWB and higher depression, higher anxiety and lower flourishing, with the strongest relationships noted among girls.ConclusionIWB interventions should be tailored to gender subgroups that may be particularly vulnerable to maladaptive mental health outcomes associated with IWB. System‐level changes that mitigate perpetuation of weight bias and discrimination which lead to IWB are also essential, particularly for girls.
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Key words
anxiety,depression,flourishing,gender differences,weight bias internalization
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