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The Relationship Between Youth Subjective Social Status (SSS) and Weight Loss

(1) took a step further and hypothesized that higher youth subjective social status (SSS) would be associated with a higher body mass index (BMI) loss among low-income Hispanic youth after a family- and community-based obesity intervention. [...]as Dr. Moon correctly observes and given our lack of a...

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Published in:Obesity (Silver Spring, Md.) Md.), 2019-05, Vol.27 (5), p.687-687
Main Author: Moon, Rena C.
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Language:English
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description (1) took a step further and hypothesized that higher youth subjective social status (SSS) would be associated with a higher body mass index (BMI) loss among low-income Hispanic youth after a family- and community-based obesity intervention. [...]as Dr. Moon correctly observes and given our lack of a comparison group, regression to the mean (RTM) cannot be ruled out as an explanation for the finding that those with extreme values at baseline tended to regress toward less extreme values at follow-up. Overweight and obesity worsened by an average of 0.17 and 0.19 each year, respectively (4). [...]population-level data suggest that the low-income Latino population of the Denver, Colorado, metropolitan area experienced a mean increase in relative BMI during our study period.
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subjects Adolescent
Body mass index
Children & youth
Food
Food Supply
Hispanic Americans
Humans
Intervention
Low income groups
Obesity
Parents
Pediatrics
Poverty
Socioeconomic factors
Surveillance
Systematic review
Weight control
Weight Loss
title The Relationship Between Youth Subjective Social Status (SSS) and Weight Loss
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