BMC Public Health (Aug 2011)

Association between Body Mass Index and depression: the "fat and jolly" hypothesis for adolescents girls

  • Speranza Mario,
  • Revah-Levy Anne,
  • Barry Caroline,
  • Hassler Christine,
  • Gasquet Isabelle,
  • Moro Marie-Rose,
  • Falissard Bruno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-11-649
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 649

Abstract

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Abstract Background Results concerning the association between Body Mass Index (BMI) and depression in adolescence are conflicting, some describing a linear association (increase in BMI with level of depression), some a U-shaped association (both underweight and obesity are associated with high levels of depression), and they mostly concern small samples. The purpose of this study was to describe the association between BMI and depression in a large representative sample of French adolescents. Methods The association between BMI and depression, measured on the Adolescent Depression Rating Scale (ADRS), was tested in a French national representative sample of 39542 adolescents aged 17. Self-report data is derived from the 2008 ESCAPAD study, an epidemiological study based on a questionnaire focused on health and drug consumption. We used spline function analysis to describe the association between BMI and depression. Results The association between BMI and depression is significant (p Conclusion There is evidence for a gender difference in the association between BMI and depression in adolescents, supporting the need to study boys and girls separately. Overweight adolescent girls are more likely to be depressed than obese adolescent girls, giving support for "fat and jolly" hypothesis not only among older women but also among adolescent girls.