Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10397/89530
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Title: The relationships between weight bias, perceived weight stigma, eating behavior, and psychological distress among undergraduate students in Hong Kong
Authors: Cheng, MY 
Wang, SM 
Lam, YY 
Luk, HT 
Man, YC 
Lin, CY 
Issue Date: Sep-2018
Source: Journal of nervous and mental disease, Sept. 2018, v. 206, no. 9, p. 705-710
Abstract: Weight bias issues are rarely discussed in Asia. Therefore, we examined the relationships between weight bias, perceived weight stigma (PWS), eating behavior, and psychological distress among Hong Kong people. Using cross-sectional design, 400 undergraduate students (175 men) completed questionnaires and were assigned into a self-reported overweight (n = 61) or nonoverweight group (n = 339) using body mass index, and a self-perceived overweight (n = 84) or nonoverweight group (n = 316) based on self-perception. For self-reported and self-perceived overweight groups, more weight bias was related to higher depression (β = -0.403; p = 0.004). Self-perceived group additionally showed that weight bias was related to PWS and inappropriate eating behaviors; PWS related to inappropriate eating behaviors. For self-reported and self-perceived nonoverweight groups, weight bias was related to PWS, inappropriate eating behaviors, anxiety, and depression (β = -0.228 to -0.148; p's < 0.05); PWS was associated with inappropriate eating behaviors, anxiety, and depression. Thus, weight bias issues should not be ignored for both overweight and nonoverweight people.
Keywords: Asian
overweight
Psychological distress
weight bias
Young adults
Publisher: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins
Journal: Journal of nervous and mental disease 
EISSN: 0022-3018
DOI: 10.1097/NMD.0000000000000869
Rights: Copyright © 2018 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.
Appears in Collections:Journal/Magazine Article

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