Barnes Rachel D, Lawson Jessica L
Division of General Internal Medicine, University of Minnesota Medical School, MMC 741, 420 Delaware Street SE, Minneapolis, MN, 55455, USA.
VA Connecticut Healthcare System, West Haven, CT, USA.
J Eat Disord. 2024 Sep 2;12(1):128. doi: 10.1186/s40337-024-01093-x.
Weight stigma refers to the social rejection, discrimination, and ideological devaluation of individuals because of body size and is a direct result of weight bias and anti-fat attitudes. Individuals with higher weight may be less likely to seek healthcare due to weight stigma, and if or when they do present for care, medical providers with weight bias may fail to provide high quality care. Little, however, is known about the intersectionality of weight stigma and perceptions of healthcare interactions as experienced by individuals who also binge eat.
Community-based adults completed online self-report questionnaires regarding generalized weight stigma (Attitudes Towards Obese Persons), healthcare interaction quality (Patient Perceptions of Healthcare Provider Interaction Quality; PPH), and disordered eating (Eating Disorder Examination-Questionnaire) via Amazon's Mechanical Turk platform. For this cross-sectional study, participants were categorized by the presence and absence of regular binge episodes. Pearson's correlations, T-tests, ANOVA/ANCOVA, and a multivariate regression were used to examine relationships among demographic variables, weight stigma, disordered eating, and the PPH.
Participants (N = 648) primarily identified as female (65.4%) and White, non-Hispanic (72.7%). Participants' average age and body mass index (BMI) were 37.5 (SD = 12.3) years old and 27.3 (SD = 6.9) kg/m2, respectively. Higher healthcare provider interaction quality ratings (PPH) were significantly related to lower BMI (r(648)=-0.098,p = 0.012), less weight stigma (r(648) = 0.149,p < 0.001), and identifying as a woman (t(514) = 2.09, p = 0.037, Cohen's d = 0.165) or White, non-Hispanic (t(646)=-2.73, p = 0.007, Cohen's d=-0.240). Participants reporting regular binge eating endorsed significantly worse perceptions of healthcare provider quality than those who did not, even after accounting for BMI, F(1, 645) = 8.42, p = 0.004, η2 = 0.013. A multivariate linear regression examining the PPH as dependent, and weight stigma and binge eating as independent, variable/s, was significant even after accounting for covariates (sex, race, BMI), F(95, 640) = 7.13,p < 0.001, R = 0.053 (small effect).
More negative experiences with healthcare providers was associated with worse weight stigma, higher BMI, regular binge eating and overall disordered eating, and for participants identifying as male or a Person of Color. These data have implications for non-clinical community populations and are particularly important as experiencing poorer quality of interactions with healthcare providers may decrease individuals' likelihood of seeking needed care for both disordered eating and health-related concerns.
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体重歧视是指因体型而对个人产生的社会排斥、歧视和观念上的贬低,是体重偏见和反肥胖态度的直接结果。体重较高的个体可能因体重歧视而不太可能寻求医疗保健,并且如果他们确实寻求医疗服务,有体重偏见的医疗服务提供者可能无法提供高质量的护理。然而,对于那些同时存在暴饮暴食行为的个体所经历的体重歧视与对医疗互动的认知之间的交叉性,我们知之甚少。
通过亚马逊的Mechanical Turk平台,以社区为基础的成年人完成了关于一般体重歧视(对肥胖者的态度)、医疗互动质量(患者对医疗服务提供者互动质量的认知;PPH)和饮食失调(饮食失调检查表问卷)的在线自我报告问卷。在这项横断面研究中,参与者根据是否存在定期暴饮暴食发作进行分类。使用Pearson相关性分析、T检验、方差分析/协方差分析和多元回归来检验人口统计学变量、体重歧视、饮食失调和PPH之间的关系。
参与者(N = 648)主要为女性(65.4%),白人且非西班牙裔(72.7%)。参与者的平均年龄和体重指数(BMI)分别为37.5(标准差 = 12.3)岁和27.3(标准差 = 6.9)kg/m²。较高的医疗服务提供者互动质量评分(PPH)与较低的BMI显著相关(r(648)= -0.098,p = 0.012),较少的体重歧视(r(648) = 0.149,p < 0.001),以及女性身份(t(514) = 2.09,p = 0.037,Cohen's d = 0.165)或白人且非西班牙裔身份(t(646)= -2.73,p = 0.007,Cohen's d = -0.240)。报告有定期暴饮暴食的参与者对医疗服务提供者质量的认知明显比没有暴饮暴食的参与者更差,即使在考虑了BMI之后,F(1, 645) = 8.42,p = 0.004,η² = 0.013。一项以PPH为因变量,体重歧视和暴饮暴食为自变量的多元线性回归,即使在考虑了协变量(性别、种族、BMI)之后仍然显著,F(95, 640) = 7.13,p < 0.001,R = 0.053(小效应)。
与医疗服务提供者的负面经历更多与更严重 的体重歧视、更高的BMI、定期暴饮暴食以及总体饮食失调相关,对于男性或有色人种参与者也是如此。这些数据对非临床社区人群具有启示意义,并且特别重要的是,因为与医疗服务提供者的互动质量较差可能会降低个体因饮食失调和健康相关问题而寻求所需护理的可能性。
无。