@Article{info:doi/10.2196/52928, author="Zhang, Yi and Ying, Ruixue and Lu, Wan and Liu, Xuemeng and Hu, Keyan and Feng, Qing and Yu, Zixiang and Wang, Zhen and Lu, Fangting and Miao, Yahu and Ma, Nanzhen and Tao, Fangbiao and Jiang, Tian and Zhang, Qiu", title="Association Among BMI, Self-Esteem, and Nonsuicidal Self-Injury in Young Adults to Understand the Influence of Socioenvironmental Factors: Longitudinal Study", journal="JMIR Public Health Surveill", year="2025", month="Feb", day="21", volume="11", pages="e52928", keywords="nonsuicidal self-injury; chronotype; BMI; self-esteem; body mass index; adolescent; young adult; teenager; social environmental factor; self-injury; sampling method; undergraduate; college student; linear regression; regression; regression model", abstract="Background: Nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) is a major public health problem leading to psychological problems in adolescents and young adults, similar to disorders such as depression and anxiety. Objective: The aims of this study were to investigate (1) the interaction between BMI and socioenvironmental factors (including chronotype and mental health) that contribute to NSSI, and (2) whether self-esteem plays a mediating role in this association. Methods: From May to June 2022, the multistage cluster sampling method was used to sample college students in four grades, including freshmen and seniors. The baseline participants were followed up 6 months later, excluding those who did not qualify, and the participants included 1772 college students. Socioenvironmental factors (chronotype/mental health), self-esteem, and NSSI were measured using a questionnaire. Multivariate linear regression models and chi-square analysis were used to evaluate the linear relationship between BMI, socioenvironmental factors, and self-esteem and the NSSI status. We use a process approach (mediation-moderation analysis) to explore the complex relationships between these variables. Results: The mean age of the participants was 20.53 (SD 1.65) years at baseline. A significant association was revealed, suggesting that a high BMI ($\beta$=.056, 95{\%} CI 0.008‐0.086, P=.018) was associated with a higher NSSI. There was also an interaction among BMI, socioenvironmental factors, and NSSI. Socioenvironmental factors played both moderating and mediating roles in the relationship between BMI and NSSI, whereas self-esteem only played a mediating role. Conclusions: Paying attention to factors such as overweight and obesity is important for early BMI control to identify other potential risk factors for NSSI and to evaluate how self-esteem can be improved considering multiple perspectives to improve the effect of BMI on NSSI in adolescents. ", issn="2369-2960", doi="10.2196/52928", url="https://publichealth.jmir.org/2025/1/e52928", url="https://doi.org/10.2196/52928" }