September 17, 2009
A new study shows that parents are more likely to understand a body mass index (BMI) chart if it is color-coded, like a traffic light, than the standard charts currently in use.

Dr. Eliana Perrin

Dr. Eliana Perrin

“We think that better communication of BMI from doctor to parent could lead to parents’ earlier awareness of their child’s weight status in time to help them make important lifestyle changes,” says Eliana Perrin, MD, MPH, senior and corresponding author of the study. Perrin is assistant professor of pediatrics at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine and alumna of the UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health’s Public Health Leadership Program.

In the study, published in the September/October 2009 issue of journal Academic Pediatrics, a sample of 163 parents of children seen at pediatric clinics at UNC and Vanderbilt University were tested to assess their understanding of BMI, their health literacy and their math abilities.

“Childhood obesity is an American epidemic that bears enormous health and economic costs to everyone,” says Perrin, also a Research Fellow at the UNC Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. “Health professionals need more effective ways of communicating our messages to parents if we want to stem this tide. We have to keep trying to help people understand the concerns their children face now and in the future.”

The BMI portion of the test included some questions that parents were asked to answer using a standard BMI chart and other questions in which they were asked to use a color-coded BMI chart. While the standard chart expresses BMI only in terms of percentiles and their ranges (for example, it shows that a 6-year-old boy with a BMI of 20 falls above the 95th percentile for weight), the color-coded chart uses familiar stop light colors. Green indicates the healthiest zone for BMI, yellow indicates more risk, and red indicates unhealthy BMI zones.

Parents were more than four times as likely to answer the same questions correctly when using color-coded BMI charts than when using standard charts. The color-coded charts were most helpful to parents with the lowest math abilities (those at the kindergarten through 5th grade level). In this group correct answers increased from 51 percent to 81 percent when they used color-coded charts. The study concluded that parents consistently performed better with color-coded charts than standard BMI charts, with those of lowest math skills reaping the largest benefit.

“This study shows the value of simplified communication tools. It’s important that parents — all parents — understand what their doctors are telling them. It’s one step in a long road to preventing obesity, but parents often don’t know when their children are overweight or gaining weight too fast, and they don’t want a complicated chart,” Perrin said.

The color-coded chart used in the study was developed by UNC researchers in the Department of Pediatrics and at the Center for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention.

First author of the study is Matthew D. Oettinger, a fourth-year medical student at UNC. Other UNC authors are Joanne P. Finkle, JD, RN, Denise Esserman, PhD, Lisa Whitehead, MD, and Steven R Pattishall, also a fourth-year medical student. The Vanderbilt authors are Russell L. Rothman, MD, MPP, and Thomas K. Spain, medical student.

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UNC Gillings School of Global Public Health contact: Ramona DuBose, director of communications, (919) 966-7467 or ramona_dubose@unc.edu.

 

 

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