Validity of Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height and Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Systematic Search
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Eligibility Criteria for Study Inclusion
2.3. Database Search Strategy and Identification of Eligible Studies
2.4. Data Extraction Process
2.5. Method of Quality Assessment of Studies
2.6. Risk of Bias Assessment (RoB 2.0 and ROBINS-E)
3. Results
3.1. Database Search
3.2. The Scope of the Review and Characteristics of the Included Studies
3.3. Findings
Subgroup Analysis: Gender-Based Variation
4. Discussion
4.1. Discrepancies and Validity Concerns in Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height
4.2. Factors Influencing Validity and Reliability of Self-Reported Data
4.3. Implications in Epidemiological and Clinical Settings
4.4. Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability
5. Conclusions and Recommendations
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Item | Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
---|---|---|
BMI measurement | Studies that directly compare self-reported and objective measures | Studies that did not directly contrast self-reported and objective measures |
Study design | Primary studies (observational or experimental study designs) | Secondary studies (reviews and meta-analyses) |
Case–control, prospective, retrospective, cross-sectional, qualitative, and RCT designs | Study designs not falling within the specified categories | |
BMI measurement tool | Utilisation of stadiometer, tape measure, portable or balance beam scale, or any other validated method for measuring weight or height | Studies not utilising the specified measurement methods or self-reporting methods |
Self-reporting methods in any format (e.g., interviewer-administered and self-complete) | Reports submitted by proxy, in which one person answers on behalf of another | |
Publication year | Studies published in the last 10 years | Studies older than 10 years |
Geographical location | No limitations | Not applicable |
First Author, Year | Continent | Country | Study Design | Gender | Age | Sample Size | Self-Reporting Method | Difference between Self-Reported and Measured |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fry et al. 2022 [10] | Oceania | Australia | Quantitative: National Health Survey (2017–2018) | Male and female | 65 years or over | 3412 | Interview | Compared with men, women underestimated weight more, by 0.75 kg. Age-related overestimations of height increased in general; individuals 85 years of age or older overestimated their height by 2.5 cm compared with those 65–69 years of age. The difference between the overestimates made by males and females was 0.9 cm. |
Beleigoli et al. 2019 [5] | South America | Brazil | Randomised controlled trial | Male and female | 18 and 60 years | 1298 participants were randomised by a stratified randomised block design balanced by gender and category of body mass index | Questionnaire | The weight that was measured and that which was reported did not differ significantly (p = 0.13). The average difference between the measured and reported height was 0.4 cm (p < 0.001). This increased the likelihood that the measured weight was higher than the reported weight by one unit every BMI level. |
Moreira et al. 2018 [15] | South America | Brazil | Quantitative: PNS Survey (2013) | A total of 52.9% of the individuals were women, and 77.1% were men | ≥18 years | 40,366 | Questionnaire | ICC > 0.88 indicated a high degree of agreement between self-reported and measured body mass index, weight, and height. |
Štefan et al. 2019 [16] | Europe | Croatia | Quantitative: cross-sectional | Boys (N = 134) and girls (N = 152) | Secondary-school students (11–16 years) | 286 | Self-administrated questionnaire | Boys and girls interpreted height and weight differently. These variations were insignificant, as demonstrated by Cohen’s D effect. For both boys and girls, the range of Pearson’s coefficient of correlation between self-reported and measured values was 0.95 to 0.97. |
Ko et al. 2022 [11] | Asia | Korea | Raw data from the 2018 CHS | Male and female | 19 years and older | 214,640 | Survey | The height that was self-reported was higher than the height that was measured, with men reporting 0.59 cm more and women reporting 0.71 cm more. In contrast, the self-reported weight was underreported compared with the measured weight; for both genders, this difference was 0.55 kg and 0.67 kg, respectively. |
Chia et al. 2023 [2] | Asia | Malaysia | Quantitative: cross-sectional | Male and female | 18 years and older | 2781 | Questionnaire survey | There were 0.4 kg and 0.4 cm discrepancies in the mean reported weight and height compared with the measured values. |
Roystonn et al. 2021 [17] | Asia | Singapore (Chinese, Malay and Indian ethnicity) | Cross-sectional, epidemiological survey | Male and female | 65 years and above | 5132 | Interview survey | Weight (0.8 kg) was underestimated, while height (0.2 cm) was overstated. The differences in weight (−0.95 kg) and height (0.35 cm) were greater in women. |
Özdemir et al. 2020 [18] | Asia/Europe | Turkey | Quantitative: cross-sectional | 304 males and 313 females | 17–30 years | 617 university students | Questionnaire | Males had a mean accuracy of 1.83 cm and females a mean accuracy of 2.42 cm for the overstated height. The underreported weight for males and females were 0.35 kg and −0.95 kg, respectively. |
Hodge et al. 2020 [9] | North America | USA | Quantitative survey | 712 men and 1817 women | 30 to 65 years | 2643 | Self-administered enrolment survey | Men generally reported being 0.48 cm taller and 1.54 kg heavier than they actually were. Women reported being 0.16 centimetres taller and −0.88 kilogrammes lighter than they actually were. |
Olfert et al. 2018 [6] | North America | USA | Quantitative: cross-sectional | Male and female | 18–28 years | 1562 | Electronic survey | Of the individuals, 30.4% (n = 413) self-reported being within ±5.08 cm (2 inches) of their objectively measured height. Of the individuals, 75.1% (n = 996) self-reported being within ±2.3 kg (5 pounds) of their actual weight. |
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Fayyaz, K.; Bataineh, M.F.; Ali, H.I.; Al-Nawaiseh, A.M.; Al-Rifai’, R.H.; Shahbaz, H.M. Validity of Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height and Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies: A Systematic Review. Nutrients 2024, 16, 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16111704
Fayyaz K, Bataineh MF, Ali HI, Al-Nawaiseh AM, Al-Rifai’ RH, Shahbaz HM. Validity of Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height and Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies: A Systematic Review. Nutrients. 2024; 16(11):1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16111704
Chicago/Turabian StyleFayyaz, Khadijah, Mo’ath F. Bataineh, Habiba I. Ali, Ali M. Al-Nawaiseh, Rami H. Al-Rifai’, and Hafiz M. Shahbaz. 2024. "Validity of Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height and Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies: A Systematic Review" Nutrients 16, no. 11: 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16111704
APA StyleFayyaz, K., Bataineh, M. F., Ali, H. I., Al-Nawaiseh, A. M., Al-Rifai’, R. H., & Shahbaz, H. M. (2024). Validity of Measured vs. Self-Reported Weight and Height and Practical Considerations for Enhancing Reliability in Clinical and Epidemiological Studies: A Systematic Review. Nutrients, 16(11), 1704. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16111704