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Body Image and Children

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Weight Control Behaviours % of Respondents Who Skip Meals 'A Lot' to 'All ... juding people by size or weight is unacceptable - cannot control these elements ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Body Image and Children


1
Body Image and Children
  • Creating a Body Friendly Environment

Current Issues Influencing Factors Body
Dissatisfaction Overall Personal Wellbeing
York Region Health Services, December 2002
2
Workshop Outline
  • Introduction - Current Issues
  • Factors Influencing Body Image
  • Body Image Continuum
  • Parents - Overall Personal Well Being
  • Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Conclusion

3
Body Image Dissatisfaction of Respondents Who
Do Not Like How Their Body Looks
Halton Region - October 2001
4
Fear of Fat of Respondents Who are Afraid of
Becoming Fat or Fatter
Halton Region - October 2001
5
Weight Control Behaviours of Respondents Who
Skip Meals A Lot to All the Time
Halton Region - October 2001
6
Weight Control Behaviours of Respondents Who
Avoid Eating When Hungry
Halton Region - October 2001
7
Weight Control Behaviours of Respondents Who
Are Trying to Lose Weight
Halton Region - October 2001
8
Weight Control Behaviours of Respondents Who
Are Trying to Gain Weight
Halton Region - October 2001
9
Frequency of Exercise of Frequency of Exercise
Halton Region - October 2001
10
Body Image Dissatisfaction
  • 27 of girls 12 - 18 years reported disordered
    attitudes about food
  • 20 of these girls were 12 - 14 years
  • dieting was the most prevalent weight loss
    strategy
  • 12 of girls 12 - 14 report binge-eating and 5
    report self-induced vomiting
  • Jennifer Jones, Disordered eating attitudes and
    behaviours in teenaged girls a school based
    study 2001

11
Factors Influencing Body Image
  • Society and the Media
  • Peers
  • Puberty and Adolescence
  • Role Models - Parents, Family(heredity) Teachers,
    and Coaches

12
Influence of Society
  • Prior to the 20th Century
  • Roaring 20s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
  • 1970s - 1980s
  • 1990s - 2000 -

13
Influence of the Media
  • Media plays a major role in everyone's life
  • Media delivers the message that thin is in
  • Media promise of what your life will be like if
    you are a certain type

14
Influence of the Media
  • Media creates a distorted image of reality
  • normalizes glamorizes what is a abnormal
  • creates false impression that all women and men
    are the same
  • sends the message that one must continually
    improve and is never good enough
  • uses technology to alter and create an image

15
Influence of Peers
  • Influence of friends increases
  • Emphasis on fitting in and being alike
  • Self absorbed
  • Focus girls - how they look
  • boys - what they can do

16
Influence of Puberty
  • Girls
  • natural weight gain necessary for shifts away
    from society's ideal body shape
  • Boys
  • natural weight gain shifts towards society's
    ideal body shape
  • Developmental tasks of adolescence

17
Influence of Role Models
  • Adults influence a childs body image through
    their words and actions by
  • being critical of ones own body and appearance
  • focusing on appearance rather than ability and
    behaviours
  • using numbers i.e. BMI, body fat, size, weight
    as a measure of health or success
  • encouraging the concept of one ideal body type

18
Influence of Role Models - family
  • Connectedness - term used to describe how youth
    feel about their social environment, including
    relationships with friends, family and the school
    environment.
  • Positive contributes to

19
Body Image Continuum
  • Body/Self Body Image Weight
    Compulsive/ Anorexia/
  • Acceptance Dissatisfaction
    Preoccupation/ Emotional Bulimia/
  • Yo-Yo
    Dieting/ Eating Binge Eating
  • Disorder
  • Adapted from chart prepared by Carla
    Rice, 1995

20
Body Image Dissatisfaction
  • May lead to unhealthy eating
  • behaviours as means to cope with
  • stress, anxiety, emotions and family problems
  • fears of not measuring up to the unnatural images
    presented in the media
  • pressure from parents and coaches
  • a fear of becoming fat

21
Why be Concerned?
  • Disordered eating affects learning outcomes
  • All ethnic, cultural and socioeconomic groups are
    affected
  • Seen in younger children, although we are more
    aware

22
Promote Overall Personal Well-Being
  • Promote Healthy Eating
  • Promote Physical Activity
  • Self-Esteem and Feeling Good About Yourself
  • education
  • validation
  • acceptance
  • reassurance

23
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Help understand their change in appearance
  • talk about how their body is changing (puberty)
  • that changes occur at different rates and times
  • cannot influence DNA or metabolism
  • Be a positive role model
  • be aware of your own dieting behaviours
  • think about comments - people of different
    sizes
  • consider complements you make

24
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Banish teasing
  • juding people by size or weight is unacceptable -
    cannot control these elements
  • do not associate size with personality, such as
    overweight are lazy or out of control and
    thin are happy and successful
  • Encourage children to advocate for themselves
  • teach skills to respond to comments make about
    appearance

25
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Show unconditional love
  • discuss what makes a good friend, neighbour or
    student
  • value each child for unique abilities
  • Talk about insides rather than outsides
  • focus on what qualities are important
  • focus on the process not the end result
  • avoid using labels of fat, skinny, hippy

26
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Read between the lines
  • stop and listen when children use statements such
    as I am so fat
  • encourage them to talk about what they did at
    school
  • Watch the pitch
  • critique the messages of the media
  • discuss the goals behind advertizing
  • share principles of computer alteration

27
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Take the focus away from numbers
  • do not discuss weight, BMI, size of clothes
  • talk about how a healthy body, fueled by healthy
    food and exercise, works best
  • Resist any temptation to put a child on a diet
  • 95 of people who lose weight regain it in 1-5
    years
  • encourage eating differently (CFG), not less

28
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Make mealtimes pleasant and nutritious
  • parent provides what (food) and when (meal and
    snack times)
  • child determines what (peas vs. carrots) and how
    much
  • encourage children to respond to normal cues of
    being full and being hungry
  • make mealtimes fun and relaxing
  • remember there are no good or bad foods
  • do not use food as a punishment or reward

29
Create a Body Friendly Environment
  • Explore different types of activities
  • role model a healthy lifestyle, such as walking,
    fitness
  • share physical activity with your children
  • learn a new skill or hobby with your child
  • encourage physical activity vs. participation in
    team sports
  • emphasize enjoyment vs. achievement

30
Create a Body Friendly Environment
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