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Citation

Halpern, Carolyn Tucker; Udry, J. Richard; Campbell, Benjamin C.; & Suchindran, Chirayath M. (1999). Effects of Body Fat on Weight Concerns, Dating, and Sexual Activity: A Longitudinal Analysis of Black and White Adolescent Girls. Developmental Psychology, 35(3), 721-736.

Abstract

Using data from a 2-year longitudinal study of 200 Black and White adolescent girls (mean age was 13.8 years at study entry), the authors investigated the implications of differences in body fat for dating and sexual activity and the implications of heterosexual activity for dieting and weight concerns. Among White girls, and Black girls with college-educated mothers, more body fat was associated with a lower probability of dating, even among nonobese girls. However, dating and sexual experience were unrelated to subsequent dieting and weight concerns. For both Blacks and Whites, body fat was the key determinant of dieting, weight dissatisfaction, and eating concerns. These findings indicate that adolescent girls' concerns about weight have a basis in real experiential differences, and efforts to promote healthy attitudes and eating habits may be more effective if the experiential implications of weight differences are taken into account.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1037//0012-1649.35.3.721

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

1999

Journal Title

Developmental Psychology

Author(s)

Halpern, Carolyn Tucker
Udry, J. Richard
Campbell, Benjamin C.
Suchindran, Chirayath M.

ORCiD

Suchindran - 0000-0002-5087-7762
Halpern - 0000-0003-4278-5646