An Examination of Estimated BMI and Perceived Wellness among Students at a Midsized Midwest University

Authors

  • Kylie Kenedy
  • Eric M. Wiedenman, M.A
  • James W. Ball, Ph.D
  • Danae Dinkel, Ph.D
  • Kazuma Akehi, Ph.D
  • Matthew R. Bice, Ph.D

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2017.81

Keywords:

BMI, Wellness, Health

Abstract

Health is complex and the perception of individual wellness can be influenced by various factors.
Students at a Midwestern university estimated their BMI, completed the Perceived Wellness Survey, and
had their BMI calculated. Measured BMI was significantly higher than estimated [F(2,155) = 62.03, p
= 0.001]. Associations existed between the measured constructs of psychological (r = -0.231; p = 0.004),
spiritual (r = 0.248; p = 0.002), and estimated BMI. Data indicates that perceived body composition is
related to wellness. False perception of body composition could lead to wellness deficiencies.

Published

2017-07-01

How to Cite

Kenedy, K., Wiedenman, E. M., Ball, J. W., Dinkel, D., Akehi, K., & Bice, M. R. (2017). An Examination of Estimated BMI and Perceived Wellness among Students at a Midsized Midwest University. American Journal of Health Studies, 32(3). https://doi.org/10.47779/ajhs.2017.81

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