Pediatric Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
Cultural Factors Underlying Obesity in African-American Adolescents
The overall goal of this study is to examine the relationships between cultural identity and identity-based motivation, physical activity, diet and obesity risk in African-American adolescents. It was hypothesized that African-American youth who self-report a bicultural identity maintain health promotion beliefs and behaviors that reduce obesity risk compared to minority youth who only identify with one culture or neither culture. It was also hypothesized that African-American youth who self report a bicultural identity are more likely to hold beliefs about health promotion behaviors that are congruent with their cultural identity than compared to youth who only identify with one culture or neither culture.
Obesity is a significant problem in African-American adolescents in the United States (US).
The most recent data suggests a doubling of overweight (BMI percentile > 85th for age and
gender) and obesity (BMI percentile >95th for age and gender) among these racial/ethnic
minority youth in the last 10 years. In 2007-8, 39.5% of African-Americans a ages 12-19 were
overweight and 24.4% were obese. These obesity rates were approximately double that of
non-Latino whites. Until now, most of our efforts to reduce pediatric obesity have targeted
at-risk youth who are physically inactive and over-consume energy dense foods. More
recently, however, that focus has broadened as a result of new understanding about how
cultural factors also shape physical activity behaviors and dietary patterns. With the rapid
increase in cultural diversity of the US, Black culture is quickly becoming a part of
mainstream American culture, evolving within the US, while simultaneously integrating
aspects of different African and Black American cultures. Consequently, African- American
youth who come of age in the US, a multicultural society, interact with people from
different cultural backgrounds that can lead to an interchange of cultural attitudes,
beliefs and behaviors. Specifically, these youth may adopt one of four general cultural
identities: (a) bicultural identity-combining aspects of their family's culture with aspects
of mainstream American culture; (b) US cultural identity- replacing their family's culture
with mainstream American culture; (c) traditional cultural identity- retaining their
family's culture while rejecting mainstream American culture; or (d) marginalized cultural
identity- becoming alienated from both cultures. Biculturalism is considered the most
adaptive process allowing individuals to function effectively in a multicultural society
while still maintaining supportive connections to their own family's culture. Hence, it was
hypothesized that racial/ethnic minority youth who self-report a bicultural identity
maintain health promotion beliefs and behaviors that reduce obesity risk compared to
minority youth who only identify with one culture or neither culture.
Empirical investigations assessing the impact of cultural identity on health promotion
behaviors in African-American adults have reported a positive identification with
African-American culture and a self- perception of being successful in both the "black" and
"white" ways of life were associated with health promotion behaviors including reduced fat
consumption and more participation in leisure-time physical activity. Less is known about
the impact of cultural identity on physical activity behavior and dietary patterns in
African-American youth. One important mechanism underlying the link between cultural
identity, physical activity and diet likely involves identity-based motivation the process
by which individuals see health behaviors as being congruent or incongruent with their
cultural identity. According to the identity-based motivation model, health promotion
behaviors (e.g., exercising, restraining eating, reducing fat and sugar intake) are not
simply personal choices made in the moment but rather are identity-infused habits. Hence,
ethnic minorities who view health promotion behaviors as White and middle-class and
unhealthy behaviors (e.g., high-fat, high-sugar diet, sedentary behaviors) as a defining
characteristic of their own cultural identity are less likely to engage in health promotion
behaviors. Oyserman et al argues that even though physical activity and diet have important
consequences for health, these identity-infused behaviors are engaged in less for their
health consequences than for their identity consequences. Hence, identity-based motivation
may serve as a novel mechanism explaining the link between cultural identity, physical
activity and diet, ultimately influencing obesity risk in African-American youth. It was
hypothesized that racial/ethnic minority youth who self report a bicultural identity are
more likely to hold beliefs about health promotion behaviors that are congruent with their
cultural identity than compared to youth who only identify with one culture or neither
culture.
1. Test whether a bicultural identity among African-American adolescents is associated
with obesity risk and related health behaviors.
H1: African-American adolescents who self-report a bicultural identity will report
lower BMIs, increased physical activity and lower fat and sugar intake compared to
adolescents who maintain an alternate cultural identity.
2. Test whether a bicultural identity is associated with identity-based motivation in
African-American adolescents.
H2: African-American adolescents who self-report a bicultural identity view health
promotion behaviors as identity-congruent compared to adolescents who maintain an
alternate cultural identity.
3. To evaluate whether identity-based motivation mediates the associations between a
bicultural identity, obesity risk and related health behaviors in African-American
adolescents. H3: Identity-congruent health promotion beliefs mediate associations
between biculturalism, BMI, physical activity and diet in African-American adolescents.
The Health & Culture project represents the convergence of two rapidly expanding areas of
pediatric obesity research; the role of cultural identity and identity-based motivation in
shaping health promotion behaviors. The investigators recently submitted several papers for
publication examining associations between cultural identity, physical activity, diet and
diabetes-related metabolic risk factors in obese African- American adolescents. Results
demonstrate that for obese African-American adolescents, biculturalism was negatively
associated with diabetes risk (via increased pancreatic beta-cell function assessed during a
frequently-sampled intravenous glucose tolerance test). These relationships remained
significant after controlling for household socioeconomic status, sex, pubertal maturation,
fat/fat-free mass, physical activity and diet. These exciting findings peeked our interest
in the area of cultural psychology, particularly as it relates to racial/ethnic disparities
in pediatric obesity. Moreover, these preliminary data extend the findings of others who
have pointed to the important role of cultural identity in shaping health and health
behaviors. The researchers are advancing this area of research further by examining the
influence of identity-based motivation in the context of cultural identity. Because
identity-based motivation is a modifiable psychosocial mechanism, a richer and more in depth
understanding of how identity-based motivation may help to inform culturally-tailored
interventions could have a large public health impact by improving health promotion
behaviors in racial/ethnic minority youth and reducing the economic burden of pediatric
obesity.
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Observational Model: Ecologic or Community, Time Perspective: Cross-Sectional
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