Department of Health, Kinesiology and Applied Physiology, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
School of Population and Public Health, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Aug 24;23(1):1621. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-16454-5.
Explicit weight bias is known as negative attitudes and beliefs toward individuals due to their weight status and can be perpetuated through misconceptions about the causes of obesity. Individuals may also experience weight bias internalization (WBI) when they internalize negative weight-related attitudes and self-stigmatize. There is a paucity of research on the beliefs about the causes of obesity and the prevalence of WBI among public Canadian samples. The aim of this study was to describe these attitudes and beliefs about obesity among a large Canadian sample across the weight spectrum.
A Canadian sample of adults (N = 942; 51% Women; mean age group = 45-54 years; mean body mass index [BMI] = 27.3 ± 6.7 kg/m) completed an online questionnaire. Participants completed the Modified Weight Bias Internalization Scale, the Anti-Fat Attitudes Questionnaire, and the Causes of Obesity Questionnaire.
Mean WBI score within the entire sample was 3.38 ± 1.58, and females had higher mean scores as compared to males (p < 0.001). Mean scores were also higher among individuals with a BMI of > 30 kg/m (4.16 ± 1.52), as compared to individuals with a BMI of 25-30 kg/m (3.40 ± 1.50), and those with a BMI of 20-25 kg/m or below 18.5 kg/m (2.81 ± 1.44) (p < 0.001 for all). Forty four percent of Canadians believed behavioural causes are very or extremely important in causing obesity, 38% for environmental causes, 28% for physiological and 27% for psychosocial causes. Stronger beliefs in behavioural causes were associated with higher levels of explicit weight bias. No BMI differences were reported on the four different subscales of the Causes of Obesity Questionnaire.
Weight bias internalization is prevalent among Canadians across all body weight statuses, and the public endorses behavioural causes of obesity, namely physical inactivity and overeating, more than its other causes. Findings warrant the reinforcement of efforts aimed at mitigating weight bias by educating the public about the complexity of obesity and by highlighting weight bias as a systemic issue that affects all Canadians living in diverse body weight statuses.
显性体重偏见是指由于个体的体重状况而对其产生的负面态度和信念,可以通过对肥胖原因的误解而持续存在。当个体将消极的体重相关态度内化并自我污名化时,他们也可能经历体重偏见内化(WBI)。在加拿大公众样本中,关于肥胖原因的信念和 WBI 的流行程度的研究很少。本研究的目的是描述在整个加拿大体重范围内的大型样本中对肥胖的这些态度和信念。
一项加拿大成年人样本(N=942;51%为女性;平均年龄组为 45-54 岁;平均 BMI[体重指数]为 27.3±6.7kg/m)完成了在线问卷调查。参与者完成了《修正体重偏见内化量表》、《反肥胖态度问卷》和《肥胖原因问卷》。
整个样本的平均 WBI 得分为 3.38±1.58,女性的平均得分高于男性(p<0.001)。BMI>30kg/m 的个体的平均得分也较高(4.16±1.52),与 BMI 为 25-30kg/m 的个体(3.40±1.50)和 BMI 为 20-25kg/m 或以下 18.5kg/m 的个体(2.81±1.44)相比(p<0.001 )。44%的加拿大人认为行为原因在导致肥胖方面非常重要或极其重要,38%的人认为环境原因,28%的人认为生理原因,27%的人认为心理社会原因。对行为原因的强烈信念与显性体重偏见水平较高有关。《肥胖原因问卷》的四个不同分量表均未报告 BMI 差异。
加拿大所有体重状况的人群中都普遍存在体重偏见内化,公众更倾向于将肥胖的行为原因,即体力活动不足和暴饮暴食,而不是其他原因。这些发现证明,通过教育公众了解肥胖的复杂性,并强调体重偏见是影响所有生活在不同体重状况的加拿大人的系统性问题,有必要加强努力减轻体重偏见。