Abstract

Diagnostic standards and codes related to excessive weight exist so that clinicians may inform patients that they are overweight: a status which may be a harbinger of more severe obesity and negative health outcomes. Equipped with this knowledge, patients may pursue medical interventions or behavioral changes to reduce their risk. However, diagnoses of overweight are unequally applied in the United States along racial lines. Binary logistic regression was used to analyze National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 2009-2016 data from 7460 participants to examine the relationship between race of non-Hispanic White and non-Hispanic Black Americans and having ever been told that one is overweight by a clinician when controlling for demographic and socioeconomic factors. The body mass index (BMI) of participants along with obesity-associated comorbidities was then incorporated into the model to see if physical size or disease status mediated the primary relationship. Black Americans are significantly less likely to report being told that they are overweight by a clinician than are White Americans regardless of clinical weight status and weight-associated comorbidities. We find that these racial differences are greatest when respondents' BMIs approach the lower threshold for clinical obesity. Our findings suggest that the lower likelihood of Black Americans to be told they are overweight compared to their White counterparts can result in serious health implications. We posit that implicit biases among clinicians may partly explain this disparity, which may exacerbate health outcome inequalities.

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