Objective:To associate the nutritional status and the self-perception of nutritional status
with the use of licit drugs among adolescents.Methods:A cross-sectional study was conducted in which 210 adolescents answered a
questionnaire on alcohol and tobacco experimentation and self-perceptions about
their nutritional status. The correspondence between the adolescents' perception
of their own nutritional status and actual nutritional status was analyzed, as
well as associations between nutritional status, self-perception of nutritional
status, gender, age, and presence of smokers at home with alcohol and tobacco use.
The variables were analyzed separately in a bivariate analysis and, subsequently,
a multivariate analysis determined the factors associated with drug use.Results:The study included 210 adolescents with a median age of 148 months; 56.6% were
females. Of the total sample, 6.6% have tried cigarettes, and 20% have tried
alcohol; 32.3% had BMI Z-Score ≥1, 12.85% had BMI
Z-Score ≥2, and 50.7% had a correct perception of his/her
weight. After a multivariate analysis, only the self-perception about weight
statistically influenced experimentation of tobacco, and patients who identified
themselves as having very high weight were more likely to experiment tobacco
(odds ratio (OR) 13.57; confidence interval (95% CI)
2.05-89.8; p=0.007); regarding alcohol use, adolescents who
identified themselves as having high weight were 2.4 times more likely to
experiment with alcohol than adolescents that identified themselves as having
normal weight (95% CI 1.08-5.32, p=0.031).Conclusions:Adolescents with self-perception of excess weight may constitute a risk group for
alcohol and tobacco use.
OBJECTIVES:To investigate the prevalence of excess body weight in the pediatric ward of University Hospital and to test both the association between initial nutritional diagnosis and the length of stay and the in-hospital variation in nutritional status.METHODS:Retrospective cohort study based on information entered in clinical records from University Hospital. The data were collected from a convenience sample of 91 cases among children aged one to 10 years admitted to the hospital in 2009. The data that characterize the sample are presented in a descriptive manner. Additionally, we performed a multivariate linear regression analysis adjusted for age and gender.RESULTS:Nutritional classification at baseline showed that 87.8% of the children had a normal weight and that 8.9% had excess weight. The linear regression models showed that the average weight loss z-score of the children with excess weight compared with the group with normal weight was −0.48 (p = 0.018) and that their length of stay was 2.37 days longer on average compared with that of the normal-weight group (p = 0.047).CONCLUSIONS:The length of stay and loss of weight at the hospital may be greater among children with excess weight than among children with normal weight.
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