Abstract
Objective: Obesity is a critical public health condition affecting Latinx adolescents and contributes to health disparities across the lifespan. Childhood and adolescent obesity is associated with reduced quality of life (QoL) and decreased self-esteem. The purpose of this study is to examine the role of cultural (e.g., familism) and psychosocial (e.g., self-esteem) factors as predictors of weight-specific QoL among Latinx adolescents with obesity. Methods: Baseline data from 160 Latinx adolescents (ages 14-16 years) with obesity (BMI > 95th percentile for age and sex) who were recruited for a diabetes prevention intervention were used. Structural equation modeling tested the relationships between four latent constructs (familism, positive self-esteem, self-deprecation, and weight-specific QoL). Results: The model tested paths from familism to positive selfesteem, self-deprecation, and weight-specific QoL, and paths from positive self-esteem and selfdeprecation to weight-specific QoL. Higher familism was positively associated with positive selfesteem but not self-deprecation. In turn, positive self-esteem was positively associated with higher weight-specific QoL, whereas self-deprecation was negatively associated. Furthermore, there was an indirect effect of familism on QoL via positive self-esteem. Conclusions: These data shed light into specific cultural and psychosocial constructs that influence QoL among Latinx adolescents with obesity. This study suggests that familism and positive self-esteem can operate as protective factors associated with higher weight-specific QoL in Latinx adolescents with obesity; whereas self-deprecation may operate as a risk factor for lower weight-specific QoL.
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Avalos, M. R. A., Ayers, S. L., Patrick, D. L., Jager, J., Castro, F. G., Konopken, Y. P., … Shaibi, G. Q. (2020). Familism, self-esteem, and weight-specific quality of life among latinx adolescents with obesity. Journal of Pediatric Psychology, 45(8), 848–857. https://doi.org/10.1093/jpepsy/jsaa047
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