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Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison of self-reported and measured height and weight

TLDR
Screening data from the Hypertension Detection and Follow-up Program in Minneapolis, MN, 1973-1974 provided an opportunity to evaluate the accuracy of self-report of height and weight, and it was found that both were reported, on the average, with small but systematic errors.
Abstract
Screening data from the Hypertension Detection and Follow-up Program in Minneapolis, MN, 1973-1974, provided an opportunity to evaluate the accuracy of self-report of height and weight. It was found that both were reported, on the average, with small but systematic errors. Large errors were found in certain population subgroups. Also, men and women differed somewhat in their pattern of misreporting. Weight was understated by 1.6% by men and 3.1% by women, whereas height was overstated by 1.3% by men and 0.6% by women. As in previous studies, it was found that the most important correlates of the amount of error were the actual measurements of height and weight. An interesting finding was that misreporting of both height and weight in men was correlated with both aspects of body size, whereas for women, it was related mainly to the characteristic in question. Certain other demographic variables, such as age and educational level, were also found to have some importance as factors influencing misreporting.

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Practical Approaches for Estimating Prepregnant Body Weight

TL;DR: None of these techniques can provide a precise measure of prepregnant weight, so researchers have little alternative but to recruit and weigh women before they become pregnant, although measurements of body weight recorded during the first trimester of pregnancy may provide a reasonable indication of prep Regnant weight.
Journal ArticleDOI

Validity of Self-Reported Weight and Stature of American Indian Youth

TL;DR: If the patterns observed in this sample exist more widely, self-reported measures may not be acceptable proxies for measured values.
Journal ArticleDOI

Use of a mobile phone diary for observing weight management and related behaviours.

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Body Dissatisfaction in College Women and Their Mothers: Cohort Effects, Developmental Effects, and the Influences of Body Size, Sexism, and the Thin Body Ideal

TL;DR: The authors found that there are generational differences in body dissatisfaction, both cohort and developmental effects contribute to these differences, and that a developmental effect (mothers' greater body size) may obscure a cohort effect (daughters' greater exposure to the thin body ideal).
Journal Article

Validity of self-reported weight and height among Saudi school children and adolescents.

TL;DR: The results display the inaccuracy of self-reported weight and height in tracking obesity in the authors' youth population and emphasize the need for community and school based programs for preventing and reducing obesity in school age through improving the nutritional status awareness, diet habits and life style.
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