Abstract

BackgroundThe negative impact of childhood overweight on psychosocial well-being has been demonstrated in a number of studies. There is also evidence that psychosocial well-being may influence future overweight. We examined the bidirectional association between childhood overweight and psychosocial well-being in children from a large European cohort.The dual aim was to investigate the chronology of associations between overweight and psychosocial health indicators and the extent to which these associations may be explained by parental education.MethodsParticipants from the IDEFICS study were recruited from eight countries between September 2007 and June 2008 when the children were aged 2 to 9.9 years old. Children and families provided data on lifestyle, psychosocial well-being, and measured anthropometry at baseline and at follow-up 2 years later. This study includes children with weight, height, and psychosocial well-being measurements at both time points (n = 7,831). Psychosocial well-being was measured by the KINDL® and Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire respectively. The first instrument measures health-related quality of life including emotional well-being, self-esteem, parent relations and social relations while the second measures well-being based on emotional symptoms, conduct problems and peer-related problems. Logistic regression was used for modeling longitudinal associations.ResultsChildren who were overweight at baseline had increased risk of poor health-related quality of life (odds ratio (OR) = 1.23; 95 % confidence interval (CI):1.03–1.48) measured 2 years later; this association was unidirectional. In contrast to health-related quality of life, poor well-being at baseline was associated with increased risk of overweight (OR = 1.39; 95 % CI:1.03–1.86) at 2 year follow-up; this association was also only observed in one direction. Adjustment for parental education did not change our findings.ConclusionOur findings indicate that the association between overweight and psychosocial well-being may be bidirectional but varies by assessment measures. Future research should further investigate which aspects of psychosocial well-being are most likely to precede overweight and which are more likely to be consequences of overweight.

Highlights

  • The negative impact of childhood overweight on psychosocial well-being has been demonstrated in a number of studies

  • A reasonable foundation exists to hypothesize that the relationship between obesity and psychological well-being could be bidirectional, that is, obesity increasing the risk of future poor psychosocial well-being and even mental health problems and poor childhood psychosocial well-being increasing the risk of future obesity [6, 19]

  • Examining the joint effects of poor health-related quality of life and poor well-being, we found that children with both poor health-related quality of life and poor well-being at baseline were most likely to become overweight at follow-up (OR = 1.68; 95 % confidence interval (CI):1.16–2.42), but the interaction between poor health-related quality of life and poor well-being was not statistically significant

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Summary

Introduction

The negative impact of childhood overweight on psychosocial well-being has been demonstrated in a number of studies. In a systematic review of obesity and depression Luppino et al reported that depression predicted the odds of future obesity but not overweight, mainly in adult populations [6]. This same study reported that the cross-sectional association between depression and overweight was more pronounced in Americans than in Europeans [6]. Childhood obesity has been observed to be associated with future mental health problems such as depression [23] and emotional problems [24].

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