%0 Journal Article %T Childhood Obesity among Puerto Rican Children: Discrepancies Between ChildĄ¯s and ParentĄ¯s Perception of Weight Status %A Winna T. Rivera-Soto %A Linnette Rodr¨Ēguez-Figueroa %J International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health %D 2012 %I MDPI AG %R 10.3390/ijerph9041427 %X Public concern about childhood obesity and associated health problems calls for the identification of modifiable factors that could halt this epidemic. Parental perceptions of their childrenĄ¯s weight status could be associated to how parents influence childrenĄ¯s eating patterns. We aimed to identify the perceptions Puerto Rican parents have of their childrenĄ¯s weight and childrenĄ¯s own perceptions of weight status as compared to real weight. A cross sectional survey was performed in a representative sample of 1st¨C6th grade students. Only half of the children correctly identified their weight, and only 62.4% of the parents correctly classified their childrenĄ¯s weight. Most obese/overweight children did not perceive themselves as such. Almost half of obese/overweight children were identified by the parents as normal weight while over half of the underweight children were perceived by their parents at normal weight. More girls than boys perceived themselves as obese/overweight and more parents of girls than of boys perceived them as such. Higher-educated parents were better at recognizing overweight/obesity among their children compared to less-educated parents. This study suggests an influence of parentsĄ¯ SES characteristics on their perceptions of childrenĄ¯s weight status as well as on childrenĄ¯s own perceptions of their weight status. %K Puerto Rican childhood obesity %K parental perception %K children perception %U http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/9/4/1427