4.6 Article

Physical and psychosocial quality of life in children with overweight and obesity from Sri Lanka

Journal

BMC PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-020-10104-w

Keywords

Childhood obesity; Quality of life; PedsQL; South Asia

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In Sri Lanka, children with overweight and obesity have lower physical QoL compared to psychosocial QoL. Factors such as higher BMI, bullying, lack of regular exercise, and difficulty finding suitable clothing negatively affect QoL. Promoting regular exercise, addressing bullying, and increasing availability of larger-sized children's clothes could improve QoL for these children.
BackgroundWhile childhood obesity is rising rapidly in South Asia, there is limited research on quality of life (QoL) of children with overweight and obesity from the region. This study assessed physical and psychosocial QoL in Sri Lankan children attending a specialized obesity clinic, from both children's and parents' perspective, and modifiable social factors affecting QoL.MethodsWe performed cross-cultural translation of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL (TM)) 4.0 (Child-Self Report and Parent-Proxy forms), and assessed self-reported and parental-perception of physical and psychosocial QoL in 8-12year-olds with overweight and obesity (n=110), referred for obesity management at a tertiary-care children's hospital in Sri-Lanka. Body mass index (BMI) and pre-selected social factors affecting QoL were also assessed. Data were analyzed by non-parametric tests (Mann-Whitney U test, Wilcoxon test and Spearman correlation).ResultsThe median physical QoL was lower than psychosocial QoL (78.1vs81.7, p=0.032) and physical QoL was inversely correlated with BMI. Parental-perception of children's physical and psychosocial QoL correlated with child-reported QoL, but was lower. Being bullied (p=0.001) and not getting regular exercise (p=0.031) were associated with lower psychosocial QoL. Both physical and psychosocial QoL were lower in children having difficulties in finding suitable clothes (p<0.001).ConclusionsChildren with overweight and obesity from Sri Lanka appeared to have greater impairment of physical QoL than psychosocial QoL. Higher BMI, bullying, lack of regular exercise and lack of suitable clothing, negatively affected QoL. Potential strategies to improve QoL include promoting regular exercise, addressing bullying and promoting availability of children's clothes in larger sizes to fit children with overweight and obesity.

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