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Validation of self-reported figural drawing scales against anthropometric measurements in adults

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 February 2016

Julia Dratva*
Affiliation:
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Swiss Tropical and Public Health Institute, Socinstrasse 57, PO Box 4002, Basel, Switzerland University of Basel, Basel, Switzerland
Randi Bertelsen
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway
Christer Janson
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Ane Johannessen
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway Department of Clinical Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
Bryndis Benediktsdóttir
Affiliation:
Department of Allergy, Respiratory Medicine and Sleep, Landspitali University Hospital, Reykjavik, Iceland
Lennart Bråbäck
Affiliation:
Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden
Shyamali C Dharmage
Affiliation:
Allergy and Lung Health Unit, Centre for Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Melbourne School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia
Bertil Forsberg
Affiliation:
Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Department of Public Health and Clinical Medicine, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden
Thorarinn Gislason
Affiliation:
Department of Allergy, Respiratory Medicine and Sleep, Landspitali University Hospital, Reykjavik, Iceland
Debbie Jarvis
Affiliation:
Faculty of Medicine, National Heart & Lung Institute, Imperial College, London, UK
Rain Jogi
Affiliation:
Lung Clinic, Foundation Tartu University Clinics, Tartu, Estonia Department of Pulmonary Medicine, Tartu University, Tartu, Estonia
Eva Lindberg
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Dan Norback
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Ernst Omenaas
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
Trude D Skorge
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway
Torben Sigsgaard
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark
Kjell Toren
Affiliation:
Occupational and Environmental Medicine, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Gothenburg, Sweden
Marie Waatevik
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
Gundula Wieslander
Affiliation:
Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
Vivi Schlünssen
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark
Cecilie Svanes
Affiliation:
Department of Occupational Medicine, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway Centre for International Health, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway
Francisco Gomez Real
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Sciences, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway Department of Gynecology and Obstetrics, Haukeland University Hospital, Bergen, Norway
*
*Corresponding author: Email julia.dratva@unibas.ch
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Abstract

Objective

The aim of the present study was to validate figural drawing scales depicting extremely lean to extremely obese subjects to obtain proxies for BMI and waist circumference in postal surveys.

Design

Reported figural scales and anthropometric data from a large population-based postal survey were validated with measured anthropometric data from the same individuals by means of receiver-operating characteristic curves and a BMI prediction model.

Setting

Adult participants in a Scandinavian cohort study first recruited in 1990 and followed up twice since.

Subjects

Individuals aged 38–66 years with complete data for BMI (n 1580) and waist circumference (n 1017).

Results

Median BMI and waist circumference increased exponentially with increasing figural scales. Receiver-operating characteristic curve analyses showed a high predictive ability to identify individuals with BMI > 25·0 kg/m2 in both sexes. The optimal figural scales for identifying overweight or obese individuals with a correct detection rate were 4 and 5 in women, and 5 and 6 in men, respectively. The prediction model explained 74 % of the variance among women and 62 % among men. Predicted BMI differed only marginally from objectively measured BMI.

Conclusions

Figural drawing scales explained a large part of the anthropometric variance in this population and showed a high predictive ability for identifying overweight/obese subjects. These figural scales can be used with confidence as proxies of BMI and waist circumference in settings where objective measures are not feasible.

Type
Research Papers
Copyright
Copyright © The Authors 2016 

The obesity epidemic has drawn attention to the role of metabolic factors in the aetiology of non-communicable diseases. Considerable evidence points to the adverse impact of obesity on cardiometabolic and respiratory diseases( Reference Seidell, Kahn and Williamson 1 , Reference Ali and Ulrik 2 ). Obesity’s adverse effect may be related to metabolic and inflammatory pathways( Reference Beuther, Weiss and Sutherland 3 , Reference Fantuzzi 4 ) and/or actual weight of body fat( Reference Canoy, Luben and Welch 5 , Reference Leone, Courbon and Thomas 6 ).

In clinical and epidemiological studies, BMI or waist-to-hip ratio is most commonly used to define anthropometric status. These proxies of body fat are related to clinical health outcomes( Reference Seidell, Kahn and Williamson 1 , Reference Rastogi, Canfield and Andrade 7 ). More sophisticated measures of body composition, such as bioimpedance measurements, are also used to assess body fat and fat-free mass( Reference Jaffrin 8 ). However, in large population-based studies or studies in remote settings, neither option is feasible. Figural stimuli, representing a range of figural drawing scales (figural scales) from extremely lean to extremely obese, are an easy-to-administer self-reported measure of body image. First introduced and validated by Stunkard et al. in 1983( Reference Sorensen and Stunkard 9 ), figural scales have been used in many studies in place of measured or self-reported height and weight( Reference Sorensen and Stunkard 9 Reference Munoz-Cachon, Salces and Arroyo 12 ) or to assess body satisfaction by comparing an individual’s perception of his/her body with his/her ideal body image( Reference Kabir, Zafar and Waslien 13 , Reference Leonhard and Barry 14 ).

The latest Respiratory Health in Northern Europe (RHINE) survey, performed in 2010–2012, introduced modernised figural stimuli for men and women, with nine categories, similar to Stunkard’s figural scales. The purpose of introducing figural stimuli in the survey was twofold. First, the figural scales complemented self-reported current height and weight by adding information on body fat distribution. Second, if the figural scales proved to be a valid instrument in the present, they could be used to assess anthropometric status at specific time points in the past (time of menopause, 55 years, 40 years, 30 years) and thereby provide a history of anthropometrics, often missing in epidemiological research. Figural scales could also be a valid alternative to or an additional instrument for assessing anthropometric data in cultural settings in which people do not know their height and weight because they are not commonly measured or because anthropometric measurements cannot be acquired.

In the current study we validated the reported current figural scales with measured current BMI in a sub-sample of RHINE participants with data on measured height, weight and waist circumference (WC). Our aim was to investigate the predictive power of figural scales to identify individuals at metabolic risk.

Materials and methods

The RHINE study population (www.rhine.nu) consists of the population-based study sample recruited for the first stage of the European Community Respiratory Health Survey (ECRHS, 1990–1994; www.ecrhs.org)( Reference Burney, Luczynska and Chinn 15 ). Men and women aged 20–44 years were randomly selected from population registers within specific boundaries and were sent a questionnaire by post (n 21 802; response rate 83·7 %). RHINE study centres are located in Reykjavik, Iceland; Bergen, Norway; Umeå, Uppsala and Gothenburg, Sweden; Aarhus, Denmark; and Tartu, Estonia. The study was approved by the local ethics commissions of each study centre. All participants provided written informed consent. Since the initial survey, participants have been followed up twice by postal questionnaire( Reference Johannessen, Verlato and Benediktsdottir 16 ). The analyses presented here were performed on a sub-sample of RHINE III participants who also participated in the third ECRHS clinical study (2011–2012) and had complete data on objectively measured BMI and current figural scales (n 1580; see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Fig. 1).

Fig. 1 Figural scales for (a) men and (b) women introduced in the Respiratory Health in Northern Europe (RHINE III) survey

Participants’ data

Through the postal questionnaires, RHINE III collected data on current and past health, lifestyle and socio-economic status, including self-reported height and weight. BMI was defined as weight/height2. Education was defined based on the highest educational degree achieved (obligatory, secondary or tertiary levels).

Figural scales

The figural stimuli introduced during RHINE III were designed specifically for the survey by Alejandro Villén-Real (Fig. 1) and based on Stunkard’s body image scales( Reference Sorensen and Stunkard 9 ). Participants were asked to tick the figural scale that best described their current figure.

Anthropometric measures

Body weight, height and waist were measured following the ECRHS standard protocol and using calibrated scales and tape bands at the RHINE study centres. Obese (BMI>30·0 kg/m2) and overweight (BMI=25·0–30·0 kg/m2) participants, as well as those with a WC of >88 cm in women and >102 cm in men, were considered to be ‘at risk’( 17 ).

Statistical methods

Study participants’ characteristics were stratified by sex. We compared the prevalence of characteristics among participants with and without objective anthropometric data, as well as between participants who had answered the question on body image and those who had not. In a multivariable logistic regression, we investigated the odds of non-response to the figural scales (see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Table 1).

Table 1 Discriminatory capabilities of figural scales for identifying obesity, overweight and increased WC, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): results of ROC curve analyses

WC, waist circumference; RHINE III, Respiratory Health in Northern Europe survey; AUC, area under the curve; ROC, receiver-operating characteristic.

Obese, BMI≥30·0 kg/m2; overweight, BMI≥25·0 kg/m2.

The median and interquartile range of objectively measured BMI (oBMI), waist circumference (WC) and self-reported BMI (sBMI) were calculated for each body shape. Differences between oBMI and sBMI were assessed. Spearman correlations between the anthropometric measures and figural scales were calculated. Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves( Reference Bulik, Wade and Heath 18 ) were computed to investigate the ability of the figural stimuli to identify subjects ‘at risk’ as defined above (obese (BMI>30·0 kg/m2) v. non-obese; overweight (BMI>25·0 kg/m2) v. non-overweight; females and males with WC >88 cm and >102 cm, respectively, v. females and males with WC below these values). ROC curves plot the true positive rate (correct detection) against the false positive rate (false alarm) for each figural scale. The area under the curve (AUC) is a measure of test accuracy( Reference Fawcett 19 ). ROC curves also visually facilitate identification of the best possible figural scale (optimal sensitivity and specificity criterion), which allows discrimination between obese and non-obese subjects with maximum sensitivity (correct detection) and the least loss of specificity (correct rejection).

ROC curve analyses were performed separately for different sex and age groups (<52 years v. ≥52 years, mean age). The empirical optimal sensitivity and specificity criterion and the Youden index were calculated for figural scales.

After dividing the study population into two random data sets, a BMI prediction model was developed with one of the samples and validated in the other. In a step-wise backward modelling procedure, the number of covariates was reduced, based on a significance level of 0·2, to a final model with the highest explanatory power (adjusted r 2; Akaike criterion( Reference Burnham and Anderson 20 )). Models were built for men and women separately. In the model, oBMI was log-transformed ( $\log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} $ ) to account for oBMI’s left-skewed distribution. The predictive model for $\log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} $ in women included: figural scales corresponding to current figure, age, educational status, current use of hormonal replacement therapy (HRT), prevalence of menopausal symptoms ever (MP symptoms ever) and chronic disease status (i.e. asthma and diabetes), as well as study centre as a random variable. The male predictive model included: current figural scales, age, educational status, smoking status, CVD status and study centre. The coefficients of the predictive model were then applied to the second random sample to predict $\log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} $ . The difference between predicted $\log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} $ and measured $\log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} $ was calculated and the values were converted back into the original units (using exp(x)).

Results

Of the RHINE III survey population (n 12 660), 93 % filled in current figural scales. Of these respondents, those participating in the ECRHS clinical assessment (and therefore with measured oBMI and WC) differed significantly from those without objective anthropometric measures. Differences were found with respect to age (52·6 years v. 51·5 years) and smoking status (15 % v. 17 %). Participants with objective measures also had a higher prevalence of respiratory disease (27 % v. 12 %), since about a third of the random ECRHS sample had been recruited based on symptoms suggestive of asthma( Reference Burney, Luczynska and Chinn 15 ). However, metabolically important measures such as physical exercise or diabetes were not significantly different between the two groups (see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Table 1). The multivariable logistic regression yielded a slightly higher odds of non-responders among older participants (OR=1·03 per year of age, 95 % CI 1·02, 1·04; see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Table 2) and participants with high educational status (OR=0·81, 95 % CI 0·73, 0·91), and a somewhat lower ratio among women (OR=0·74, 95 % CI 0·64, 0·87; Supplemental Table 2).

The analytic sample included slightly more women (58 %) than men (42 %). The mean age of the overall sample was 52·4 years (sd 7·1), ranging from 38 to 66 years. With respect to anthropometric measures, the mean oBMI was 26·5 kg/m2 (women, 25·7 (sd 6·2) kg/m2; men, 26·9 (sd 4·7) kg/m2) and the mean WC was 94·3 cm (women, 87·8 (sd 17·6) cm; men, 98·6 (sd 15·1) cm).

With increasing figural scale, from scale 1 (extremely lean) to scale 9 (extremely obese), the median, 25th and 75th percentiles of oBMI and WC increased (Fig. 2). The self-reported BMI percentiles showed a comparative increase (see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Table 3). The overall Spearman correlation coefficient between oBMI and sBMI was very high (0·94), with a difference between sexes (women, 0·944; men, 0·928; both significant P<0·001, sex difference P=0·02). The correlation coefficient between oBMI and figural scale rating was higher for women (0·77) than for men (0·70; both P<0·001, sex difference P<0·007). The differences between sBMI and oBMI were marginal, with a tendency towards under-reporting at higher figural scales and over-reporting at lower figural scales (Supplemental Table 3).

Fig. 2 Box-and-whisker plots showing the distribution of oBMI and WC by figural scale, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): (a) oBMI in women (n 674); (b) oBMI in men (n 769); (c) WC in women (n 527); (d) WC in men (n 500). The bottom and top edge of the box represent the first and third quartiles (interquartile range); the line within the box represents the median; the ends of the bottom and top whiskers represent the upper and lower adjacent values; and the dots represent outliers (oBMI, objectively measured BMI; WC, waist circumference; RHINE III, Respiratory Health in Northern Europe survey)

The modal and median scale in both women and men was 5, corresponding to a median oBMI of 26·6 kg/m2 in women and 26·3 kg/m2 in men. Based on measured WC, about half of the women (48·6 % had WC>88 cm; range 88·05–152·25 cm) and about two-fifths of the men (38·4 % had WC>102 cm; range 102·05–145·5 cm) were defined as ‘at risk’. Less than 1 % of participants had an oBMI of <18·5 kg/m2, so no ‘underweight’ category was defined. Instead, these participants were included in the ‘normal weight’ category (see online supplementary material 1, Supplemental Table 4).

Receiver-operating characteristic curves for figural scales

The ROC curve analyses yielded high AUC values for identifying obesity (women, AUC=0·879; men, AUC=0·863), as well as overweight (women, AUC=0·859; men, AUC=0·842; Fig. 3).

Fig. 3 ROC curves (——●——, data points; ■, cut-off point of optimal sensitivity and specificity; — — —, reference line of no discrimination) for identifying obese subjects with figural scales, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): (a) women, sensitivity=0·71, specificity=0·88, AUC=0·8786; (b) men, sensitivity=0·76, specificity=0·85, AUC=0·8630 (ROC, receiver-operating characteristic; RHINE III, Respiratory Health in Northern Europe survey; AUC, area under the curve)

When adjusted for age, the discriminatory power of the figural scales remained consistently high (women, AUC=0·815; men, AUC=0·784). The optimal sensitivity and specificity criterion (optimal criterion) for identifying metabolic risk, correctly classifying the greatest number of ‘at risk’ individuals and minimising false positives, was assessed separately for obese, overweight and WC (Table 1).

Differences in predictive power and optimal criterion by age were observed for both men and women. For older participants (≥52 years) the optimal criterion remained the same, while for younger participants of both sexes (<52 years) the optimal criterion to identify obesity was one scale lower; for example, for women a figural scale of 4 instead of 5. For men, ROC curve analyses also yielded a lower optimal criterion for overweight, figural scale of 4 instead of 5. On the other hand, no differences by age were observed for WC.

Validation modelling

Figural scales alone already explained a large part of oBMI variance (adjusted r 2=0·58 for women, 0·48 for men). Adding additional model covariates improved the adjusted r 2 substantially. The validation model showed good predictive power for BMI with an adjusted r 2 of 0·67 for women and 0·52 for men. When potential influential data points, based on Cook’s distance estimation, were excluded from the data set, the adjusted r 2 increased to 0·74 in women and 0·62 in men. However, the effect estimates did not change considerably. The multivariable linear regression models we obtained for predicting BMI based on figural scales were as follows.

For women:

$$\eqalignno{ &#x0026; \log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits} \,{\equals}\,{\rm 2} \cdot {\rm 73661}{\plus}{\rm figural\, \, scales}{\times}(0 \cdot 0987671) \cr &#x0026; \,\qquad \quad {\plus}{\rm age}\, {\times}(0 \cdot 0004111){\plus}{\rm educational\, \, status} \cr &#x0026; \,\qquad \quad {\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0169593) {\plus}{\rm ever\, \, asthma}\, {\times}(0 \cdot 0246553)\cr &#x0026; \,\qquad \quad {\plus}{\rm diabetes}\, {\times}(0 \cdot 0705768){\plus}{\rm MP\ symptoms\ ever} \cr &#x0026;\qquad\quad\,{\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0302591){\plus}{\rm HRT\, \, current\, \, use}\, {\times}(0 \cdot 0303381)\cr &#x0026; \qquad\quad{\plus}{\rm centre}{\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0001263). $$

For men:

$$\eqalignno{ &#x0026; \log {\mathop{\rm BMI}\nolimits}\,{\equals}\,3 \cdot 152997{\plus}{\rm figural\, \, scales}\, {\times}(0 \cdot 0564805) \cr &#x0026; \,\quad \qquad {\plus}{\rm age}\, {\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0028301)\, {\plus}{\rm educational\, \, status}\, \cr &#x0026; \,\quad \qquad {\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0071292)\, {\plus}{\mathop{\rm CVD}\nolimits} \, {\times}(0 \cdot 0542313) \cr &#x0026; \,\quad \qquad {\plus}{\rm smoking\, \, status}\, {\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 0243481){\plus}{\rm centre} \cr &#x0026; \,\quad \qquad {\times}({\minus}0 \cdot 000238). $$

The mean difference between predicted BMI and oBMI was −0·01 (sd 2·64) kg/m2 for women and −0·033 (sd 2·87) kg/m2 for men. The negative values imply that the predicted measure was higher than the measured value.

Discussion

Our validation study shows that the figural scales used in RHINE III are a reliable means of identifying populations ‘at risk’, for both men and women. They can identify subjects ‘at risk’ with high accuracy, as shown by the ROC curve analyses with an AUC well above 0·8, which is of high value to studies on chronic disease development. Both sexes reported their current figural scales in accordance with objectively measured current BMI and WC. The figural scales performed well in the validation analyses, with highly consistent results across various validation approaches. The analyses could also validate BMI based on self-reported weight and height.

In general, the figural scales were well reported by RHINE participants, with a small degree of missing information in the full study (6·6 %). We observed some differences between responders and non-responders. Older, less educated and male participants were less inclined to fill in the figural scales.

Objectively measured BMI corresponded very well with the expected increase at each figural scale. Correlation was high between the two methods and comparable to correlations found by Bulik et al. (females, r=0·81; males, r=0·73)( Reference Bulik, Wade and Heath 18 ). Some studies do not report equally high correlations, but the finding of higher correlation for women than for men is consistently observed in studies( Reference Fitzgibbon, Blackman and Avellone 21 Reference Martinez, Kearney and Kafatos 23 ). Correlations were also high for self-reported and objectively measured BMI, with the expected degree of over- and under-reporting depending on the figural scale.

We observed an overlap of BMI ranges across the figural scales, as expected. The ordinal and fixed scale forces people to decide on one figure or the other, even though they might feel they are in between two figural scales. This may result in a greater range of BMI( Reference Kaufer-Horwitz, Martinez and Goti-Rodriguez 24 ). The larger variability of objectively measured BMI observed at the extreme ends of the figural scales relates to the smaller number of participants found at these extremes, compared with other studies. In addition, pathological misconceptions of body weight and body image would be reflected in the extreme ends of the figural scales and may also explain some of the variation in these extreme categories.

The ROC curve analyses provided optimal sensitivity and specificity criteria for metabolic risk in this Scandinavian population, both in men and women. For younger men and women, the optimal criterion for obesity (and for overweight among men) was one figural scale lower than for older subjects. This is possibly due to more muscle mass in younger persons than in the elderly. While we cannot fully explain this observation, WC showed no age group difference, supporting our hypothesis. Younger people might also be more conscious about body norms in their age group and report lower figural scales. The optimal criteria for metabolic risk based on measured WC were the same as for overweight. The similarity between overweight and obesity criteria implies that while figural scales have a high power to identify subjects ‘at risk’, differentiating between those overweight and obese is more difficult. ROC curve analyses and calculated optimal criteria are similar to findings in other validation studies( Reference Kabir, Zafar and Waslien 13 , Reference Bulik, Wade and Heath 18 , Reference Kaufer-Horwitz, Martinez and Goti-Rodriguez 24 ). The importance of calculating optimal sensitivity and specificity criteria using objective data within a study population is underlined by Madrigal et al., who compared researchers’ and participants’ perception of the figures and found considerable discrepancy leading ultimately to a considerable misclassification( Reference Madrigal, Sanchez-Villegas and Martinez-Gonzalez 22 ). Differential interpretation of the figural stimuli has also been shown by ethnicity, with different ethnic groups assigning different BMI to the same figural stimuli( Reference Fitzgibbon, Blackman and Avellone 21 , Reference Kronenfeld, Reba-Harrelson and Von Holle 25 , Reference Mciza, Goedecke and Steyn 26 ).

Figural scales alone explained about 50 % of BMI variance, comparable to the r 2 published by Kaufer-Horwitz et al.( Reference Kaufer-Horwitz, Martinez and Goti-Rodriguez 24 ) and Bulik et al.( Reference Bulik, Wade and Heath 18 ). The explanatory power increased when additional subjective data were added to the predictive model and after excluding significant outliers. The mean difference between predicted and objectively measured BMI was only 1 BMI unit. We observed larger, non-significant differences in the objective measures at the extreme figural scales (extremely lean, figural scale 1 and extremely obese, figural scale 9). Researchers wishing to use figural scales to estimate BMI are advised to collect these additional data, where possible, to achieve the highest degree of accuracy.

Some study limitations need to be considered when applying the figural scales. First, misconceptions of body size and weight might be differential and reporting bias, for example by sex, education and overweight( Reference Paeratakul, White and Williamson 27 ) or due to psychiatric disorders( Reference Torres-McGehee, Monsma and Dompier 28 ), cannot be totally excluded. Therefore, at the individual level, there is a risk of misclassification when using figural scales. At the population level, however, the instrument discriminates well between individuals without or ‘at risk’.

Second, participants were recruited randomly and should represent the general population living at the respective study sites, all set in Nordic countries. For that reason, our results are generalizable to Northern Europe or similar European countries only. We had no additional data on ethnicity, which could have introduced non-differential misclassification and loss of power( Reference Kronenfeld, Reba-Harrelson and Von Holle 25 ).

Third, the sample yields a high prevalence of asthma. There is, however, no reason to believe that asthmatics would have a differential perception of their body image. While obesity is known as a risk factor of asthma, we did not observe a high prevalence of obesity in our study population. Altogether, we do not assume differential misclassification due to the asthmatics in our study.

Finally, few participants were found at the extreme figural scales and thus there was insufficient power to calculate corresponding BMI or cut-off points for underweight subjects.

In summary, subjects ‘at risk’, as defined by BMI and WC, can be identified with high accuracy using this figural scale. The reliability of the RHINE III figural stimuli for a Scandinavian population is comparable to figural stimuli applied in other, partially ethnically diverse population-based studies. Given the good performance of the figural stimuli, we will further investigate their use in public health and clinical studies. The figural scales are a valid alternative or even an additional instrument to assess anthropometric data in public health research.

Acknowledgements

Financial support: C.S., V.S., B.B. and T.G. are members of the COST Action BM1201. J.D. received a research scholarship from the COST Action BM1201 (COST-STSM-ECOST-STSM-BM1201-160913-036015). The RHINE III was supported financially by the Norwegian Research Council (grant number 214123); the Bergen Medical Research Foundation; the Western Norwegian Regional Health Authorities (grant numbers 911 892 and 911 631); the Norwegian Labour Inspection; the Norwegian Asthma and Allergy Association; the Faculty of Health of Aarhus University (project number 240008); The Wood Dust Foundation (project number 444508795); the Danish Lung Association; the Swedish Heart and Lung Foundation; the Vårdal Foundation for Health Care Science and Allergy Research; the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research; the Bror Hjerpstedt Foundation; the Swedish Asthma and Allergy Association; the Icelandic Research Council; and the Estonian Science Foundation (grant number 4350). ECRHS acknowledgements are provided in the online supplementary material 2. Conflict of interest: The authors declare that they have no conflict of interest. Authorship: J.D., main author, developed the analytic plan presented in this paper; she conducted the analyses, interpreted the data in conjunction with all authors, and was responsible for writing the first and all consecutive drafts of the submitted manuscript. R.B. was involved in the data collection in Norway; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions C.J. is the principal investigator (PI) of the RHINE study and is in the ECRHS study directorate; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. A.J. was involved in the RHINE protocol development, the data collection in Norway, the preparation of the RHINE cohort data set and provided statistical support; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. B.B. was involved in the data collection in Iceland; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. L.B. was involved in the data collection in Umeå, Sweden; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. B.F. is the PI of the study centre in Umeå, Sweden; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. T.G. is the PI of the study centre in Iceland and is in the RHINE and ECRHS study directorate; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. D.J. is the study coordinator of ECRHS; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. R.J. is the PI of the study centre in Tartu, Estonia and is a member of the RHINE study directorate; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. E.L. was involved in the data collection in Umeå, Sweden; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. D.N. was involved in the data collection in Uppsala, Sweden; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. E.O. is the PI of the study centre in Bergen, Norway and is a member of the RHINE study directorate; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. V.S is the PI in the study centre in Aarhus, Denmark and is a member of the RHINE study directorate; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. T.D.S. was involved in the data collection in Bergen, Norway; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. T.S. was involved in the data collection in Aarhus, Denmark; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. K.T. is the PI in Gothenburg, Sweden and is in the RHINE and ECRHS study directorate; he participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. M.W. was involved in the data collection in Bergen, Norway; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. G.W. was involved in the data collection in Uppsala, Sweden; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. S.C.D. is the PI of ECRHS, Melbourne, Australia; she participated in the interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. C.S. participated in the study protocol development and data collection in Bergen, Norway and is in the ECRHS study directorate; she participated in the development of the analytic plan, interpretation of the results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. F.G.R. developed the body silhouette protocol for RHINE and ECRHS, and participated in the study protocol development and data collection in Bergen, Norway; he participated in the development of the analytic plan, interpretation of results in conjunction with all authors and provided critical commentary in the draft revisions. C.S. and F.G.R. share last authorship. Ethics of human subject participation: The study was approved by the local ethical commissions of each study centre. All participants provided written informed consent.

Supplementary material

To view supplementary material for this article, please visit http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S136898001600015X

Footnotes

C Svanes and FG Real share last authorship.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Figural scales for (a) men and (b) women introduced in the Respiratory Health in Northern Europe (RHINE III) survey

Figure 1

Table 1 Discriminatory capabilities of figural scales for identifying obesity, overweight and increased WC, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): results of ROC curve analyses

Figure 2

Fig. 2 Box-and-whisker plots showing the distribution of oBMI and WC by figural scale, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): (a) oBMI in women (n 674); (b) oBMI in men (n 769); (c) WC in women (n 527); (d) WC in men (n 500). The bottom and top edge of the box represent the first and third quartiles (interquartile range); the line within the box represents the median; the ends of the bottom and top whiskers represent the upper and lower adjacent values; and the dots represent outliers (oBMI, objectively measured BMI; WC, waist circumference; RHINE III, Respiratory Health in Northern Europe survey)

Figure 3

Fig. 3 ROC curves (——●——, data points; ■, cut-off point of optimal sensitivity and specificity; — — —, reference line of no discrimination) for identifying obese subjects with figural scales, according to sex, in Scandinavian adults aged 38–66 years (sub-sample of the RHINE III): (a) women, sensitivity=0·71, specificity=0·88, AUC=0·8786; (b) men, sensitivity=0·76, specificity=0·85, AUC=0·8630 (ROC, receiver-operating characteristic; RHINE III, Respiratory Health in Northern Europe survey; AUC, area under the curve)

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