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Title: Self-perceived overweight, weight loss attempts, and weight gain: Evidence from two large, longitudinal cohorts. Author: Robinson E, Sutin AR, Daly M. Journal: Health Psychol; 2018 Oct; 37(10):940-947. PubMed ID: 30234353. Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Self-identification of overweight is associated with a greater desire to lose weight, but also counterintuitively with increased future weight gain. The present research examined whether weight loss attempts mediate the prospective relation between self-perceived weight status and weight gain across adolescence and young adulthood. METHOD: Data from 2 longitudinal cohort studies was used. Study 1 tested whether the association between self-perceived weight status and weight gain (from age 10/11-14/15 years) was mediated by weight loss attempts among Australian adolescents. Study 2 focused on young adults based in the United States and examined whether attempts at weight loss mediated the relation between self-perceived overweight and weight gain from ages 16 to 28 years. RESULTS: In Study 1, self-perceived weight status among adolescents was associated with greater weight gain and weight loss attempts mediated 16% of this relation. In Study 2, young adults who perceived their weight status as overweight gained more weight over time and weight loss attempts mediated 27% of this relation. CONCLUSIONS: Adolescents and young adults that identify they are overweight are more likely to gain weight over time and weight loss attempts appear to mediate this effect. (PsycINFO Database Record[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]