Accuracy of Self-Reported Body Weight Compared to Measured Body Weight
- 1 September 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Scandinavian Journal of Social Medicine
- Vol. 15 (3) , 191-198
- https://doi.org/10.1177/140349488701500311
Abstract
In 1977, in the evaluation of the prevention programme for cardiovascular diseases, 11880 persons in Eastern Finland were asked to report their own weight on a questionnaire. Each participant was weighed during the following clinical examination. The data of the self-reported body weight were analysed according to sex, age, measured weight and body-mass index (BMI). The results showed that older people underestimated their weight to a greater extent than did younger people of both sexes. The error between measured and self-reported weight was greater in heavier subjects than in thinner individuals. In both sexes weight estimate error (measured weight minus self-reported weight) correlated more strongly with high BMI than with measured weight. Associations between weight estimate error and other variables were studied using a multiple regression model. Men whose annual family income was low were more likely to underestimate their weight than the men with a high annual income. In general, women reported their weight more correctly than men did. Older women were more likely to report their weight less than younger women, whereas women who visited their doctor frequently or who had higher annual family incomes were more aware of their actual body weight than those who had few doctor's consultations or whose family income was low. In men 5.2% and in women 8.3% of the variation in the weight estimate error was explained by the regression model. Women with higher education living in urban areas and who had recently attempted to reduce their weight had greater errors in their self-reported weight than did other women of the same age and BMI.This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
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