Department of Internal Medicine, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Division of Endocrinology, University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Iowa City, Iowa, USA.
Health Expect. 2024 Oct;27(5):e70013. doi: 10.1111/hex.70013.
Weight stigma is the social devaluation and denigration of individuals because of their excess body weight, resulting in poorer physical and mental health and healthcare avoidance. Attribution Theory and Goffman's theory of spoiled identity provided a general overarching framework for understanding weight stigma experiences.
Our purpose was to explore weight stigma experiences from a broad range of perspectives emphasizing identities typically excluded in the weight stigma literature.
We conducted a qualitative descriptive study with data drawn from 73 substantive narrative comments from participants who responded to a larger survey.
Analysis developed five themes: Working on weight, Not being overweight, Lack of help and empathy, Exposure and embarrassment and Positive experiences. Individuals who would be clinically assessed as overweight, especially men, often did not identify with having a weight problem and found the framing of personal responsibility for weight empowering. Participants with larger body sizes more often attributed embarrassment and shame about weight to treatment in the clinical setting. Older participants were more likely to have positive experiences.
The findings suggest ongoing tension between the framing of weight as a personal responsibility as opposed to a multifactorial condition with many uncontrollable aspects. Gender, age and body size shaped respondent perspectives, with some young male respondents finding empowerment through perceived personal control of weight. The healthcare system perpetuates weight stigma through lack of adequate equipment and excessively weight-centric medical counselling. Recommending a healthy lifestyle to patients without support or personalized medical assessment may perpetuate weight stigma and associated detrimental health outcomes.
Patients with obesity and overweight were integral to this study, providing comments for our qualitative analyses.
体重歧视是指由于个体超重而对其进行社会贬低和诋毁,从而导致身心健康状况恶化,并导致其回避医疗保健服务。归因理论和戈夫曼的受损身份理论为理解体重歧视体验提供了一个普遍的总体框架。
我们的目的是从广泛的角度探讨体重歧视体验,强调通常在体重歧视文献中被排除的身份。
我们进行了一项定性描述性研究,数据来自对较大规模调查做出回应的 73 位参与者的实质性叙述性评论。
分析得出了五个主题:控制体重、体重不超标、缺乏帮助和同理心、暴露和尴尬、积极体验。那些被临床评估为超重的个体,尤其是男性,通常不认为自己有体重问题,并且发现个人对体重负责的框架赋予了他们力量。体型较大的参与者更多地将体重方面的尴尬和羞耻归因于临床治疗。年龄较大的参与者更有可能有积极的体验。
研究结果表明,体重被视为个人责任的框架与多种不可控因素的多因素状况之间存在持续的紧张关系。性别、年龄和体型塑造了受访者的观点,一些年轻男性受访者通过感知到对体重的个人控制而获得了力量。医疗保健系统通过缺乏足够的设备和过度以体重为中心的医疗咨询来延续体重歧视。向没有支持或个性化医疗评估的患者推荐健康的生活方式可能会延续体重歧视和相关的不良健康后果。
肥胖和超重患者是这项研究的重要组成部分,为我们的定性分析提供了评论。