Pediatric Obesity and Nutrition Counseling

2012 
About one third of children are overweight/obese. This study examined whether these children were more likely to have nutrition counseling documented and if counseling was affected by gender or ethnicity. Method. A retrospective secondary data analysis was used to explore nutrition counseling for an insured pediatric population. A sample of 526 records met inclusion criteria. Member records were categorized based on BMI as underweight, normal weight, or overweight/obese. Results. The observed proportion of overweight/obese children was significantly higher than the national average, 37% versus 33% respectively, P = .03. No significant difference was found in documented nutrition counseling for children with overweight/obese BMIs—Pearson χ2(1, N = 526) = 1.586; P = .21, Φ = 0.06. Likewise, no significant difference was found in documented nutrition counseling for overweight/obese children by race—Pearson χ2(1, N = 37) = 0.11; P = .74, Φ = 0.05—or gender—Pearson χ2(1, N = 194) = 0.35; P = .55; Φ = −0.04. In...
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