School of Psychology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
J Bioeth Inq. 2013 Mar;10(1):49-57. doi: 10.1007/s11673-012-9412-9. Epub 2013 Jan 4.
Several recent anti-obesity campaigns appear to embrace stigmatization of obese individuals as a public health strategy. These approaches seem to be based on the fundamental assumptions that (1) obesity is largely under an individual's control and (2) stigmatizing obese individuals will motivate them to change their behavior and will also result in successful behavior change. The empirical evidence does not support these assumptions: Although body weight is, to some degree, under individuals' personal control, there are a range of biopsychosocial barriers that make weight regulation difficult. Furthermore, there is accumulating evidence that stigmatizing obese individuals decreases their motivation to diet, exercise, and lose weight. Public health campaigns should focus on facilitating behavioral change, rather than stigmatizing obese people, and should be grounded in the available empirical evidence. Fundamentally, these campaigns should, first, do no harm.
最近的几项反肥胖运动似乎将肥胖者的污名化作为一种公共卫生策略。这些方法似乎基于以下基本假设:(1)肥胖在很大程度上是个人可以控制的,(2)污名化肥胖者将激励他们改变行为,并且也将导致成功的行为改变。但实证证据并不支持这些假设:尽管体重在一定程度上受个人控制,但存在一系列生物心理社会障碍,使体重调节变得困难。此外,越来越多的证据表明,污名化肥胖者会降低他们节食、锻炼和减肥的动力。公共卫生运动应该侧重于促进行为改变,而不是污名化肥胖者,并且应该基于现有的实证证据。从根本上说,这些运动首先不应该造成伤害。