Conducted by the CDC, the new study found that heavy and obese children did not view themselves as such -- they saw themselves as having a normal weight. This "misperception" was more commonly found in African America and Mexican-American children (34 percent) than their Caucasian peers (28 percent). Other findings from the study, include: roughly 50 percent of obese boys and more than 33 percent of obese girls believed they were at a normal rate and most children with misperceived weight status' hailed from lower-income families.
Recently, a new report by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention examining weight gain amongst students of different racial and ethnic backgrounds over the summer made a revealing finding: Hispanic children are more likely to put on weight during vacation than their peers of other races.
Source: Published originally on LatinoTimes.com as Latino Childhood Obesity: Overweight Kids Do Not Think They Weigh Too Much, Study Finds, By Susmita Baral, Jul 25 2014.