Rogge Mary Madeline, Greenwald Marti, Golden Amelia
Indiana University School of Nursing, Indianapolis, IN 46112, USA.
ANS Adv Nurs Sci. 2004 Oct-Dec;27(4):301-15. doi: 10.1097/00012272-200410000-00006.
The study was conducted to explore what it is like for individuals and family members to live with obesity as a chronic illness. An interpretive phenomenological design was used to obtain and analyze interviews of 13 obese individuals and 5 of their family members. A convenience sample was used to recruit the subjects who participated in the audiotaped interviews. The interviews used open-ended questions. Audiotapes were transcribed and analyzed for identifying the major themes within each transcript, and patterns of meaning across narratives. The major themes and patterns were described through written essays and group discussions about the transcripts. The participants revealed frequent experiences of stigmatization and discrimination on the basis of their obesity. Those who are obese are reminded through their everyday encounters with family members, peers, healthcare providers, and strangers, that their being deviates from social norms, and that they are inferior to those who are not obese. Obese subjects experience a pattern of denigration and condemnation that is so pervasive as to constitute what Harvey has called civilized oppression. A discussion of the social construction of obesity and the elements of civilized oppression, as they are experienced by those who are obese, offers new insights into interpersonal relationships that can provide a foundation for more effective care of the obese population.
本研究旨在探索肥胖作为一种慢性病,患者本人及其家庭成员的生活状况。采用解释现象学设计,对13名肥胖个体及其5名家庭成员进行访谈并分析。通过便利抽样招募参与录音访谈的受试者。访谈采用开放式问题。对录音进行转录和分析,以确定每份转录文本中的主要主题以及不同叙述中的意义模式。通过撰写文章和对转录文本进行小组讨论来描述主要主题和模式。参与者透露,他们因肥胖经常遭受污名化和歧视。肥胖者在与家庭成员、同龄人、医疗服务提供者和陌生人的日常接触中,会不断被提醒他们的存在偏离了社会规范,且不如非肥胖者。肥胖受试者经历了一种诋毁和谴责的模式,这种模式非常普遍,构成了哈维所称的文明压迫。探讨肥胖的社会建构以及肥胖者所经历的文明压迫因素,能为理解人际关系提供新的视角,从而为更有效地照顾肥胖人群奠定基础。