Literature DB >> 20620186

Social class and body management. A qualitative exploration of differences in perceptions and practices related to health and personal body weight.

Louise H Smith1, Lotte Holm.   

Abstract

To deepen our understanding of the relationship between social class and obesity, the study compares the ways in which conceptions of health and personal body weight are enmeshed in the everyday lives of people with disparate socio-cultural backgrounds and weight status. We ask how perceptions and enactments of health and personal body weight are related to social structures and practices at work, in spare time, and in family life. Qualitative interviews focusing on life history and current everyday life were conducted with two groups of Danish adults. One group contained highly educated people of normal weight. The other contained people with less education and body weights above the obesity threshold. Recommended healthy lifestyle regimes complied more fully with the established practices and internalized ideas of those in the normal weight highly educated group than they did with the practices and ideas of those in the high-BMI less educated group. Work environments, and also conditions connected with work that were carried over into spare time and family life, further promoted the integration of healthy lifestyles into the everyday practices of the highly educated, normal weight group. In the less educated, high-BMI group this kind of integration occurred less.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20620186     DOI: 10.1016/j.appet.2010.07.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appetite        ISSN: 0195-6663            Impact factor:   3.868


  5 in total

1.  Low-income women's conceptualizations of food craving and food addiction.

Authors:  Nipher M Malika; Lenwood W Hayman; Alison L Miller; Hannah J Lee; Julie C Lumeng
Journal:  Eat Behav       Date:  2015-03-27

2.  Meaning of the terms "overweight" and "obese" among low-income women.

Authors:  Samantha Ellis; Katherine Rosenblum; Alison Miller; Karen E Peterson; Julie C Lumeng
Journal:  J Nutr Educ Behav       Date:  2013-10-14       Impact factor: 3.045

3.  "Writing nutritionistically": A critical discourse analysis of lay people's digital correspondence with the Swedish Food Agency.

Authors:  Karolin Bergman; Paulina Nowicka; Karin Eli; Elin Lövestam
Journal:  Health (London)       Date:  2021-09-20

4.  Exploring Environment-Intervention Fit: A Study of a Work Environment Intervention Program for the Care Sector.

Authors:  Louise Hardman Smith; Birgit Aust; Mari-Ann Flyvholm
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2015-08-25

5.  Decomposition of Gender Differences in Body Mass Index in Saudi Arabia using Unconditional Quantile Regression: Analysis of National-Level Survey Data.

Authors:  Mohammed Khaled Al-Hanawi; Gowokani Chijere Chirwa; Tony Mwenda Kamninga
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2020-03-30       Impact factor: 3.390

  5 in total

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