| Literature DB >> 26466329 |
Franziska U C E Jung1, Claudia Luck-Sikorski1, Nina Wiemers2, Steffi G Riedel-Heller2.
Abstract
AIM: Negative attitudes towards people with obesity are common even in health care settings. So far, the attitudes and causal beliefs of dietitians and nutritionists have not been investigated systematically. The aim of this article was to review the current state of quantitative research on weight-related stigma by dietitians and nutritionists.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26466329 PMCID: PMC4605484 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0140276
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1The different phases of the systematic review.
1HCP = Health Care Professionals.
Summary of methodological differences of all eight studies.
| Author/ Country | N | Sample | Data Collection | Instrument | Results | Connotation of attitudes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Berryman, Duable, Manchester, Mittelstaedt (2006); USA[ | 76 | 38 female dietetic students (Ø age:21.2 years) and 38 female students from other departments (Ø age:21.4 years), studying at the University of Ohio | Experimental control group design; Explicit measures by use of questionnaires | Fat Phobia Scale | Explicit attitude: overall no significant difference between groups, dietetics students showed negative attitude towards obesity (Ø FPS = 3.66, ranging from 2.0 to 5.0), approx. 16.0% from both groups adopted strong negative attitude (Ø FPS≥4.4), 13.0% of dietetics majors showed neutral, slightly positive attitude (FPS<2.5) | Negative |
| Edelstein, Silva & Mancini (2009); USA[ | 128 | Registered dietitians of the “American Dietetic Association” Gender: 99.0% female. Work experience: 5 years:61.0%; 2–5 years:30.0%; <1 year:9.0% | Implicit measures | Fat People-Thin People Implicit Association Test | Implicit attitude: 76.0% of dietitians showed a strong to moderate preference for thin people compared to obese people. Their own weight, age and origin did not have an impact on implicit attitude towards people with obesity. | Negative |
| Harvey, Summerbell, Kirk & Hill (2002); UK[ | 187 | Randomly selected dietitians of the”British Dietetic Association” | Independent Measures Survey; Explicit measures by use of questionnaires | Questionnaire on Obesity and Overweight 1. Assumption about reasons for obesity (Harvey & Hill, 2001) 2. Attitude towards obesity (Harvey & Hill, 2001; Allison’s Attitude Towards Obese People, ATOP) 3. attribution of responsibility (Harvey & Hill, 2001) | 1. Causes: generally no difference between Obesity and Overweight questionnaire, physical inactivity, caloric intake of unhealthy food to high, higher caloric intake due to mood changes, weight changes due to repetition of dieting, interpersonal factors. 2. Explicit attitude: overall neutral to positive; obese (BMI≥30.0) people were rated more negative in comparison to overweight (BMI 25.0–30.0) people; obese people were thought to be less successfully working, negatives attitude relate to an adopted negative self-esteem, low sexual attractiveness and poorer health. 3. Responsibility: overweight and (especially) obese people were seen as being responsible for their excess weight | Positive |
| Hellbardt, Riedel-Heller & Sikorski (2014); GER[ | 49 | Randomly selected dietitians, participating at a congress on nutrition | Explicit measures by use of questionnaires | Vignette-based approach (two vignettes:42-years-old woman, either normal weight or over-weight) and the Fat Phobia Scale (14 pairs of adjectives) | Explicit attitude: statistical more negative evaluation of the vignette “over-weight”, especially for the following pairs “shapeless-shapely”, “secure-insecure” and “poor self-esteem–self-esteem”, FPS = 3.35 (overweight), compared to FPS = 2.61 (normal weight). Causes: most agreement towards internal causes of over-weight (e.g. lack of physical activity or overeating) compared to other reasons (genetic factors, condition-related reasons) | Negative |
| McArthur & Ross (1997); USA[ | 411 | Registered dietitians of the “Presidents of State Dietetic Associations” (overall 439, 411 dietitians counsel overweight patients) | Explicit measures using questionnaire, contact via email | 1.15 “attitude statements” about own weight 2.37 “attitude statements” about overweight (Men: BMI>26.4 and women: BMI>25.8) clients (rating scale from “strong agreement”, “neither nor” to “strong disagreement”) | Explicit attitude: Dietitians with (self-perceived) obesity showed negative attitude towards themselves (feel physical unattractive, blamed themselves for being obese). However, positive attitude related to own goal setting, preservation of weight, willpower>self-stigmatization. Ambivalent attitude towards obese clients. Attribution/ Reasons: Emotional problems; unrealistic goal setting, feelings of ambivalence in relation to obese people’s discipline to hang on a diet | Neutral |
| Oberrieder, Walker, Monroe & Adeyanju (1995); USA[ | 298 | 64 students studying Nutrition Science (Kansas State University); 234 registered dietitians (members of the Kansas Dietetic Association) | Explicit measures by use of questionnaires (send by post) | Bray Attitude Towards Obesity Scale, 47 items including a four-point Likert Scale, Range: positive attitude: 0.0 to 93.0; negative attitude: 94.0 to 188.0 | Explicit attitude: Registered dietitians as well as students demonstrated negative attitude towards people with obesity (men: BMI≥27.3 and women: BMI≥27.8), participants with a self-reported healthful weight had a slightly more negative attitude compared to overweight participants Students: BATOS = 101.94 Dietitians: BATOS = 103.71 | Negative |
| Puhl, Wharton & Heuer (2009); USA[ | 182 | 182 students studying nutrition science. Age: Ø23.1 years; degree program: since Ø1.7 years; gender: 92.0% female; weight (BMI): 80.0% normal weight (18.5–24.9), 5.0% underweight (<18.5), 14.0% overweight (25.0–29.9), 1.5% obese (30.0–39.0) | Randomized Experimental Study, Between-Subjects Design, questionnaire includes four different conditions/ patient profiles: 1. non-obese, female patient 2.non-obese, male patient 3.obese, female patient 4.obese, male patient | 1. Fat Phobia Scale and 2. perception of the patient depending on test condition: How receptive is the patient in terms of dietary advice for treatment? Does he/she understand it? Compliances? Motivation? Patient’s ability to change or maintain weight? How much pleasure would it give me to work with this patient? | Explicit attitude: 1. Fat Phobia Scale: no differences between groups, all students showed moderate extent of fat phobia (ØFPS = 3.7), similar to the general population. 2. obese people were attributed less compliances than non-obese patients; quality of diet and medical condition of obese patients was rated poorer compared to people with normal weight | Negative |
| Swift, Hanlon, El-Redy, Puhl & Glazebrook (2013); UK[ | 1130 | Students: “Master of Nutrition”, “Nursing”, B.Sc. in Nursing, B.Sc. in Medical Science, B.Sc. in Nutrition and Food Sciences, University of Nottingham | Explicit measures by the use of questionnaires | 1. Fat Phobia Scale: individual adjectives not given. 2. Beliefs about Obese People: six-point scale, scores range from 0 to 48, the higher the score the greater the belief that obesity cannot be personally controlled. | Explicit attitude: 1.FPS = Ø3.8; 1.4% showed positive or neutral attitude; 10.5% showed more distinct signs of fat phobia. Signs of less marked fat phobia: a) higher BMI; b) B.Sc. in Nursing; c) a stronger belief that obesity cannot be personally controlled. 2.BAOP = Ø13.4 | Negative |
Note: Negative = demonstrates negative attitude towards adiposity; Positive = positive or neutral attitude towards adiposity; Neutral = ambivalent attitude or ambiguous findings; N = sample size; FPS = Fat Phobia Scale; IAT = Implicit Association Test; BATOS = Bray Attitude towards Obesity Scale; BAOP = Beliefs About Obese People
Average FPS-Scores.
| Study | Mean FPS-Score |
|---|---|
| Berryman et al. (2006) [ | 3.7 |
| Hellbardt et al. (2014) [ | 3.35 |
| Puhl et al. (2009) [ | 3.7 |
| Swift et al. (2013) [ | 3.8 |
| Sikorski et al. (2012) | 3.6 |
| Sikorski et al. (2013) | 3.56 |
Note: FPS = Fat Phobia Scale
a for reference: average FPS of the study representing the German general population [6]; and health care professionals [41, 43]
Systematic outline of studies summarizing characteristics attributed to individuals with obesity.
| Attribution pair | Berryman et al. 2006 | Puhl et al. 2009 | McArthur & Ross 1997 | Hellbardt et al. 2014 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lazy/ motivated | 52.6% | 41.0% | 2.71 (n.s.) | |
| bad / good | ||||
| No willpower/willpower | 47.4% | 41.0% | 3.17 ( | |
| Unattractive/ attractive | 47.4% | 54.0% | 18.5% | 3.20 ( |
| Poor self-control/discipline | 60.5% | 65.0% | 42.6% | 3.25 ( |
| Insecure/secure | 65.8% | 80.0% | 3.61 ( | |
| Poor self- esteem/self esteem | 63.2% | 75.0% | 16.7% | 3.63 ( |
| Likes Food/dislikes food | 89.5% | 80.0% | 3.67 ( | |
| Self-indulgent/ self-sacrificing | 52.4% | 47.0% | 3.06 ( | |
| Overeats/undereats | 81.6% | 81.0% | 3.51 ( | |
| Slow/fast | 73.7% | 68.0% | 3.50 ( | |
| Inactive/active | 71.1% | 77.0% | 3.47 ( | |
| Shapeless/shapely | 68.4% | 36.0% | 3.56 ( | |
| no endurance/having endurance | 63.2% | 72.0% | 3.50 ( | |
| Weak/ strong | 36.8% | 31.0% | 3.02 ( |
Note: Vignette describing an overweight woman: 1 = positive attribute to 5 = negative attribute;
significance levels refer to the difference between the overweight vignette and a normal-weight vignette):
*p < .05,
**p < .01,
***p < .001
aagreement rate of characteristics about obesity is illustrated by percentages.
bmean scores for attribution of pairs of adjectives assigned to a
Summary of studies examining the dietitians’ believes about causes or controllability of obesity.
| Study | Causes/Patient-blaming | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Harvey et al., 2002[ | positive | Physical inactivity most important, followed by mood, eating too much of the wrong food, continuously dieting and interpersonal factors |
| Berryman et al., 2006[ | (positive) | 81.6% reported that “overeating” can be linked to obesity and overweight |
| Puhl et al., 2009[ | (positive) | 81.0% reported that “overeating” can be linked to obesity and overweight > according to the authors, the results suggest that participants tended to believe automatically that obesity is due to poorer diets and generally worse health (even when provided with information about individuals’ healthy lifestyle) |
| Swift et al., 2013[ | positive | The belief that obesity is not under the individuals’ control was perceived stronger by students studying nursing compared to students studying Dietetics (the overall BAOP score including all students, was 13.4) |
| Hellbardt et al. 2014[ | positive | Internal causes (e.g. overeating or lack of willpower and physical inactivity) were seen as more important than genetic factors or illness-related causes |
Note: positive = patient is directly blamed as being responsible or having control over his/her weight; (positive) = patient is indirectly blamed as being responsible because the perceived causes of obesity are patient-centered.