학술논문

Investigating resilience and its association with stress, anthropometrics, and metabolic health in adolescents with obesity: a pilot study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Psychology, Health & Medicine. 2023, Vol. 28 Issue 7, p1997-2006. 10p. 3 Charts, 1 Graph.
Subject
*PILOT projects
*STATISTICS
*CONFIDENCE intervals
*CHILDHOOD obesity
*ANTHROPOMETRY
*MULTIVARIATE analysis
*MULTIPLE regression analysis
*HEALTH status indicators
*MANN Whitney U Test
*FISHER exact test
*METABOLIC disorders
*RISK assessment
*T-test (Statistics)
*PEARSON correlation (Statistics)
*DESCRIPTIVE statistics
*RESEARCH funding
*DATA analysis software
*DATA analysis
*PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience
*PSYCHOLOGICAL stress
*DISEASE risk factors
*EVALUATION
*ADOLESCENCE
Language
ISSN
1354-8506
Abstract
The increasing prevalence of children with obesity has contributed to a higher risk of developing cardiometabolic comorbidities. Adversity and chronic stress are negatively linked to cardiometabolic outcomes, and resilience is positively associated with improved outcomes. However, whether resilience is protective against metabolic disturbances preceding disease presentation is less understood. This study explored correlations between stress, anthropometrics, and metabolic parameters with resilience (total, individual, family, peers, school, community), and determined which resilience domains predict metabolically unhealthy obesity. Adolescents with obesity (n = 39; 12–18y) completed anthropometrics, an oral glucose tolerance test, the Adolescent Resilience Questionnaire, and Perceived Stress Scale. Lower stress (r = −0.70, p < 0.001), BMI (r = −0.42, p = 0.01), fat mass (ρ = −0.41, p = 0.01), and fat-free mass (ρ = −0.41, p = 0.01) were associated with greater resilience. Greater school resilience was associated with lower risk for having metabolically unhealthy obesity (odds ratio = 0.87, 95% Confidence Intervals, 0.78–0.98, p = 0.02). Our findings suggest that resilience is associated with lower adiposity, and that lower school resilience is an independent predictor of having metabolically unhealthy obesity. Further work exploring correlations between school resilience, perceived stress, and metabolic outcomes, would optimize programs for obesity-related chronic conditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]