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1.
Hist Psychiatry ; 31(2): 232-236, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31755313

ABSTRACT

This short note reports the eighteenth-century account of Mademoiselle Lapaneterie, a French woman who started drinking vinegar to lose weight and died one month later. The case, which was first published by Pierre Desault in 1733, has not yet been reported by present-day behavioural scholars. Similar reports about cases in 1776 are also presented, confirming that some women were using vinegar for weight loss. Those cases can be conceived as a lesson from the past for contemporary policies against the deceptive marketing of potentially hazardous weight-loss products.


Subject(s)
Acetic Acid/history , Diet Fads/history , Diet, Reducing/history , Acetic Acid/therapeutic use , Diet, Reducing/mortality , Female , France , History, 18th Century , Humans , Marketing/history
2.
J Pediatr ; 167(2): 366-71, 2015 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25982141

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: To assess the accuracy of self- and parent-report of weight, height, and body mass index (BMI) in children between 8 and 12 years of age and to determine whether self- or parent-report should be preferred for preadolescents' subjective measures. STUDY DESIGN: Through at-home questionnaires, 875 preadolescent children (44% boys; 56% girls) and their parents (N = 821) were asked to report the children's weight and height. Objective weight and height were measured at school by trained interviewers. RESULTS: Correlations between objective, self-reported, and parent-reported measures were strong for weight, height, and BMI, but children and parents generally underestimated the children's weight by about 1 kg, their height by less than 1 cm, and their BMI by less than 0.25 kg/m(2). The magnitude of the underestimation varied by age, sex, and BMI category, with older children, girls, and children in the overweight and obese BMI categories underestimating their weight to a greater extent. Weight estimates provided by girls' parents tended to be lower than the real values more often than those of boys' parents. CONCLUSIONS: Children and parents are likely to misreport children's weight, height, and BMI. For most youths aged 8 years of age and older, self-report appears as accurate as parent-report and could, therefore, be used interchangeably.


Subject(s)
Body Mass Index , Obesity/diagnosis , Parents , Self Report , Age Factors , Body Height , Body Weight , Child , Female , Humans , Male , Reproducibility of Results , Sex Factors
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