
Research view
Title: | Personality profile of obese children and adolescents: relation to body mass index and metabolic complications |
Author: | Nermin M. Shaker , Heba H. Elshahawi , Menan Rabie and Rasha T. Hamza |
Abstract: |
Background
Personality traits can affect eating behaviors, the development of obesity, and obesity
treatment failure. Because of the scarcity of research on the relationship between
personality traits and childhood obesity and its importance in obesity treatment
outcome, the current study aimed to assess the personality profile of obese children
and adolescents, investigate the relationship between patterns of temperament and
character as well as psychopathology in obese youths and explore the relationship
between personality traits and severity of childhood obesity and its metabolic
complications independent of the impact of psychopathology.
Methods
After exclusion of children with comorbid psychiatric disorders, 40 obese children
were enrolled from the Pediatrics Obesity Clinic, Ain Shams University. They were
compared with a matched control group of nonobese children (n = 20). The Junior
Temperament and Character Inventory was used to assess the personality profile, and
Child Behavioral Checklist was used to assess psychopathology.
Results
Obese children were found to have significantly higher novelty seeking and harm
avoidance behavior compared with nonobese controls. Among obese children, high
novelty seeking was associated with externalizing problems, and low self-transcendence
was associated with internalizing problems. Higher BMI was associated with higher
novelty seeking and lower persistence. Personality traits related to metabolic
complications of obesity were persistence, self-transcendence, and self-directedness.
Conclusion
Personality traits may contribute to health outcome through their association with
obesity and its progression. These data underscore the future potential usefulness of
personality assessment in obesity management and suggest the use of cognitive
behavioral therapy targeting these personality traits to achieve better treatment
outcome.
Keywords:
adolescents, children, metabolic complications, obesity, temperament and character
|
Journal: | Middle East Current Psychiatry 2014, 21:193–201 |
Text: | |
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