| Literature DB >> 27826445 |
Shelly Russell-Mayhew1, Kristin M von Ranson2, Lindsay McLaren3, Angela S Alberga1.
Abstract
Weight-related issues (including excess weight, disordered eating and body concerns) are often considered as comprising distinct domains of 'obesity' and 'eating disorders'. In this commentary we argue that the concept of weight bias is an important variable when considering wellbeing across the spectrum of weight-related issues. We make the following six points in support of this argument: i) weight bias is common and has adverse health consequences, ii) shaming individuals for their body weight does not motivate positive behaviour change, iii) internalized weight bias is particularly problematic, iv) public health interventions, if not carefully thought out, can perpetuate weight bias, v) weight bias is a manifestation of social inequity, and vi) action on weight bias requires an upstream, population-level approach. To achieve sustainable reductions in weight bias at a population level, substantive modifications and collaborative efforts in multiple settings must be initiated. We provide several examples of population-level interventions to reduce weight bias.Entities:
Keywords: Eating behaviours; Overweight; Weight prejudice; Weight stigma
Year: 2016 PMID: 27826445 PMCID: PMC5100338 DOI: 10.1186/s40337-016-0112-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Eat Disord ISSN: 2050-2974
Examples of interventions to prevent weight bias, organized using the Nuffield Council on Bioethics’ intervention ladder as a framework [52]
| Government action | Examples in the field of weight bias (Research locations) |
|---|---|
| Restrict choice. | • Develop legislation to prohibit weight discrimination [ |
| • Implement anti-discrimination laws against bullying in schools and weight discrimination in the employment and healthcare sectors [ | |
| • Mandatory post-secondary curricula and appropriate training on weight-related issues for pre-service student teachers, health professionals and public health practitioners [ | |
| • Formal training for coaches to prevent eating disorders in sports [ | |
| • Mandatory implementation of evidence-based body appreciation, media literacy and eating disorder prevention programs in schools [ | |
| • Ban digital modification of images that glamorize thinness in women and muscularity in men in the media [ | |
| Guide choice through disincentives. | • Implement penalties for evidence of weight discrimination in employment, healthcare and education sectors (e.g., charging schemes in the employment and healthcare sectors, exclusion from extra-curricular activities for youth in schools) |
| Guide choice through incentives. | • Offer awards, fiscal or other incentives for the promotion of wellbeing and body inclusivity in the education, healthcare and employment sectors (e.g., a school board could offer an award or recognition for schools that implement body inclusivity in their teaching and learning practices) |
| Guide choice through changing the default policy. | • Devise media and journalism guidelines for prohibiting gender-based and weight-based stereotypes in the media [ |
| • Depict positive stereotypes of people living with obesity in the media [ | |
| Enable choice. | • Modify the built environment to accommodate individuals of all weights [ |
| • Offer an evidence-based school program geared towards positive body image, acceptance of body diversity and prevention of weight-related issues [ | |
| Provide information. | • Create flyers and posters that promote positive body image and body diversity and distribute them in schools |
| • Disseminate population health campaigns to address weight bias [ | |
| Do nothing or simply monitor the situation | • Monitor the prevalence of weight bias in different sectors (i.e., education, healthcare, employment) |
| • Do nothing |
Note: Strategies for evaluation of the effectiveness and cost of these initiatives must also be incorporated