| Literature DB >> 27747099 |
Sarah Nutter1, Shelly Russell-Mayhew1, Angela S Alberga2, Nancy Arthur1, Anusha Kassan1, Darren E Lund3, Monica Sesma-Vazquez1, Emily Williams1.
Abstract
Weight bias is a form of stigma with detrimental effects on the health and wellness of individuals with large bodies. Researchers from various disciplines have recognized weight bias as an important topic for public health and for professional practice. To date, researchers from various areas have approached weight bias from independent perspectives and from differing theoretical orientations. In this paper, we examined the similarities and differences between three perspectives (i.e., weight-centric, non-weight-centric (health-centric), and health at every size) used to understand weight bias and approach weight bias research with regard to (a) language about people with large bodies, (b) theoretical position, (c) identified consequences of weight bias, and (d) identified influences on weight-based social inequity. We suggest that, despite differences, each perspective acknowledges the negative influences that position weight as being within individual control and the negative consequences of weight bias. We call for recognition and discussion of weight bias as a social justice issue in order to change the discourse and professional practices extended towards individuals with large bodies. We advocate for an emphasis on social justice as a uniting framework for interdisciplinary research on weight bias.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27747099 PMCID: PMC5055973 DOI: 10.1155/2016/3753650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Obes ISSN: 2090-0708
Summary of similarities and differences identified among research areas.
| Research perspective | Language used | Theoretical position | Consequences identified | Weight-based social inequity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weight-centric | Obesity | Attribution theory | Depression | Gender |
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| Health-centric | Fat/fatness | Critical analysis of obesity discourses | Oppressive social context | Gender |
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| Health at every size | Obese/fat | Critical analysis of “healthism” | Reinforcing & privileging thinness | |