Braun Matthias, Schell Johanna, Siegfried Wolfgang, Müller Manfred J, Ried Jens
Chair of Systematic Theology II (Ethics), Philosophical Faculty and Department of Theology, Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Kochstraße 6, 91054 Erlangen, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Sep 20;14:977. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-977.
While numerous studies highlight the relevance of socio-cultural factors influencing incidence and prevalence of obesity, only a few address how obese people perceive causes and prevention of or intervention for obesity. This study contributes to a more thorough understanding of subjective aetiologies and framing themes for a mainly understudied but promising field. Thus it may serve for the development of effective public health strategies to combat obesity.
Autobiographically based in-depth interviews were conducted with 20 patients (adolescents and young adults) institutionalised in the obesity rehabilitation centre INSULA in Bischofswiesen (Germany). The data were analysed with Atlas.ti with regard to two main perspectives: (1) How the interviewees perceive 'their' obesity from a subjective point of view and (2) which conclusions they draw from their own 'story' concerning prevention/intervention strategies.
The interviewees did not indicate a clear starting point for their overweight. Nevertheless, certain life-events (e.g. divorce or illness of parents) were identified as catalysing weight gain. As a consequence of coping with distress, body weight rises rapidly and not continuously. Obesity was generally framed as a problem primarily located within the family and not in the wider environment. Corresponding to this, the family was identified as the main and most important addressee of preventive measures. The interviewees highlighted the importance of personal responsibility as a prerequisite for self-determined action against obesity, but denied any link between responsibility and guilt.
This study contributes substantially to a broader perspective on the prevention of obesity. First, more attention has to be paid to the interactions of medical aspects and the social dimension of obesity. Second, prevention efforts should be more aware of the relevance of subjective aetiology when it comes to the definition of reasonable and effective governance strategies in tackling obesity. Third, current assumptions concerning the importance of personal responsibility for obesity prevention might underestimate the relevance of self-determined action of the obese.
尽管众多研究强调了社会文化因素对肥胖发生率和患病率的影响,但只有少数研究探讨了肥胖者如何看待肥胖的成因、预防或干预措施。本研究有助于更全面地理解一个主要未被充分研究但前景广阔的领域中的主观病因和框架主题。因此,它可能有助于制定有效的公共卫生策略来对抗肥胖。
对德国比绍夫斯维森的肥胖康复中心INSULA收治的20名患者(青少年和年轻人)进行了基于自传的深度访谈。使用Atlas.ti软件从两个主要角度对数据进行了分析:(1)受访者如何从主观角度看待“自己的”肥胖;(2)他们从自己的“故事”中得出了哪些关于预防/干预策略的结论。
受访者并未指出其超重的明确起始点。然而,某些生活事件(如父母离异或生病)被确定为体重增加的催化剂。由于应对压力,体重迅速上升且并非持续上升。肥胖通常被视为主要存在于家庭内部而非更广泛环境中的问题。相应地,家庭被确定为预防措施的主要且最重要的对象。受访者强调个人责任作为自主采取抗肥胖行动的先决条件的重要性,但否认责任与内疚之间存在任何联系。
本研究对肥胖预防的更广泛视角做出了重大贡献。首先,必须更加关注肥胖的医学方面与社会层面的相互作用。其次,在制定合理有效的肥胖治理策略时,预防工作应更加意识到主观病因的相关性。第三,当前关于个人责任对肥胖预防重要性的假设可能低估了肥胖者自主行动的相关性。