Lena M. Hansson
Karolinska Institutet
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lena M. Hansson.
Scandinavian Journal of Public Health | 2010
Lena M. Hansson; Erik Näslund; Finn Rasmussen
Aims: We examined whether men and women with obesity reported different types of discrimination to a greater extent than those with normal weight, and explored whether these associations were modified by socioeconomic position. Method: National representative sample of men and women, with normal weight (n = 2,000), moderate obesity (n = 2,461) and severe obesity (n = 557). Participants were identified in a yearly population-based survey (1996—2006) and data on perceived discrimination and potential confounding factors were measured in 2008. Logistic regression models tested whether obesity was associated with perceived lifetime, workplace, healthcare and interpersonal discrimination. Results: The overall response rate was 56%. For men, moderate obesity was associated with workplace discrimination, while severely obese women were more likely to report this sort of discrimination than normal weight women. Severely obese individuals were twice as likely to report healthcare discrimination than normal weight individuals. Women, regardless of weight status group, were in turn twice as likely to report healthcare discrimination as men. Women with severe obesity were significantly more likely to report interpersonal discrimination compared with normal weight women. Socioeconomic position modified the association between weight status and healthcare discrimination. Highly educated individuals with moderate and severe obesity were more likely to report healthcare discrimination than their normal weight counterparts, whereas low educated individuals with normal weight, moderate and severe obesity were equally likely to report discrimination. Conclusions: In this large, population-based study, discrimination was more likely to be reported by obese individuals compared with those of normal weight. The associations, however, varied according to gender and socioeconomic position.
Acta Paediatrica | 2009
Lena M. Hansson; Nina Karnehed; Per Tynelius; Finn Rasmussen
Aims: Population‐based research on childrens possible prejudice against thin, obese and average body sizes is scarce. This study examined childrens prejudice against various body sizes of both sexes. The effects of sex, body size, place of residence and socio‐economic status (SES) on childrens prejudice were also investigated.
Body Image | 2014
Lena M. Hansson; Finn Rasmussen
This study examined the associations of different socio-demographic and psychological factors with attitudes towards obesity. Individuals with different weight status (N=2436) were drawn from an annual population-based survey in Sweden, and data on attitudes towards obesity (ATOP) and predictor variables were assessed in 2008. The strongest predictor of ATOP was controllability beliefs about obesity (β=0.83). Thus, greater controllability beliefs about obesity predicted more negative attitudes. Sex and weight satisfaction were also independently associated with ATOP. However, there was no, or only a weak, association between weight satisfaction and ATOP among individuals with normal weight or overweight. And the higher the weight satisfactions of individuals with obesity, the more positive were their attitudes. It seems that stigma-reduction strategies in the general public should address the uncontrollable factors in the aetiology of obesity. However, more research is needed to understand the underlying causes of peoples attitudes towards obesity.
Pediatrics | 2016
Nora Döring; Ata Ghaderi; Benjamin Bohman; Berit L. Heitmann; Christel Larsson; Daniel Berglind; Lena M. Hansson; Elinor Sundblom; Margaretha Magnusson; Margareta Blennow; Per Tynelius; Lars Forsberg; Finn Rasmussen
OBJECTIVE: The objective was to evaluate a manualized theory-driven primary preventive intervention aimed at early childhood obesity. The intervention was embedded in Swedish child health services, starting when eligible children were 9 to 10 months of age and continuing until the children reached age 4. METHODS: Child health care centers in 8 Swedish counties were randomized into intervention and control units and included 1355 families with 1369 infants. Over ∼39 months, families in the intervention group participated in 1 group session and 8 individual sessions with a nurse trained in motivational interviewing, focusing on healthy food habits and physical activity. Families in the control group received care as usual. Primary outcomes were children’s BMI, overweight prevalence, and waist circumference at age 4. Secondary outcomes were children’s and mothers’ food and physical activity habits and mothers’ anthropometrics. Effects were assessed in linear and log-binominal regression models using generalized estimating equations. RESULTS: There were no statistically significant differences in children’s BMI (β = –0.11, 95% confidence interval [CI]: –0.31 to 0.08), waist circumference (β = –0.48, 95% CI: –0.99 to 0.04), and prevalence of overweight (relative risk = 0.95, 95% CI: 0.69 to 1.32). No significant intervention effects were observed in mothers’ anthropometric data or regarding mothers’ and children’s physical activity habits. There was a small intervention effect in terms of healthier food habits among children and mothers. CONCLUSIONS: There were no significant group differences in children’s and mothers’ anthropometric data and physical activity habits. There was, however, some evidence suggesting healthier food habits, but this should be interpreted with caution.
Journal of Physical Activity and Health | 2017
Daniel Berglind; Lena M. Hansson; Per Tynelius; Finn Rasmussen
BACKGROUND Levels of physical activity (PA) affect health already at 4 years of age. The aims of this study were to describe levels and patterns of PA and sedentary time (ST) in a sample of 4-year-old Swedish children and to assess the number of children achieving PA guidelines throughout the week. METHODS Data from 540 4-year-old children enrolled in the population-based PRIMROSE trial was used. PA was measured for a period of 1 week by the Actigraph GT3X+ accelerometer. Average PA, time spent in light PA, moderate-to-vigorous PA (MVPA) and ST were assessed. RESULTS On average children spent 6.7% of the day in MVPA and 45% of the day being sedentary and 33% (n = 178) of the children met the PA guidelines of 60 minutes of MVPA per day. Boys spent 56.8 (SD 21.8) minutes/day in MVPA, while girls spent 43.0 (SD 18.1) minutes/day in MVPA (P < .001). CONCLUSIONS Four-year-old children spent almost half of the day being sedentary and only one-third meet the recommended PA guidelines. This finding is alarming as higher levels of PA, already at 4 years of age, seem to reduce the risk of childhood obesity and provides long-term health benefits.
BMC Family Practice | 2011
Lena M. Hansson; Finn Rasmussen; Gerd Ahlström
Pediatric Obesity | 2009
Lena M. Hansson; Finn Rasmussen
BMC Public Health | 2014
Nora Döring; Lena M. Hansson; Elina Scheers Andersson; Benjamin Bohman; Maria Westin; Margaretha Magnusson; Christel Larsson; Elinor Sundblom; Mikaela Willmer; Margareta Blennow; Berit L. Heitmann; Lars Forsberg; Sanna Wallin; Per Tynelius; Ata Ghaderi; Finn Rasmussen
Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior | 2016
Lena M. Hansson; Berit L. Heitmann; Christel Larsson; Per Tynelius; Mikaela Willmer; Finn Rasmussen
European Journal of Public Health | 2015
Daniel Berglind; Lena M. Hansson; Per Tynelius; Finn Rasmussen