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Recent reports demonstrate the need to improve methods for identifying obesity among adolescent minority populations,
especially among Native American adolescents. Our study examined several anthropometric measures to see which one
was the best indicator of obesity for Native American adolescents. We compared our data with that provided by the Centers
for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), and the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANESIII). We
examined which measures differed significantly from the NHANESIII, and which were most effective for measuring obesity
in Native American adolescents. Our study population represented a cross-sectional, epidemiological population (N=183)
of Native American students (ages 14-18) from diverse tribal backgrounds at an urban residential high school. We obtained
baseline anthropometric measurements of height, weight, waist, triceps skin-fold, and calf skin-fold measures from the Native
American students and compared this information with reference data to assess weight classification by body mass indices
for our population. Under the conditions of our study, we found the calf skin-fold measure to be the best indicator of normal
weight in male Native American adolescents, and the triceps skin-fold measure to be the best indicator of obesity in male
Native American adolescents. The assessment of health risk by anthropometric measures we obtained appears appropriate for
predicting obesity and developing effective interventions for Native American adolescents in general. Correlations between
anthropometric measures and obesity in our study population may prove of significant interest for monitoring obesity
prevention initiatives for Native American adolescents.
Biography
Shasha Zheng has completed her PhD from University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and postdoctoral studies from Yale University School of Medicine. She is an Assistant Professor of nutrition at California Baptist University. She has published 9 first-author papers in top-reputed journals in the areas of nutrition and diseases.