| Literature DB >> 34843517 |
Grainne O'Donoghue1, Caitriona Cunningham1, Melvina King1, Chantel O'Keefe1, Andrew Rofaeil1, Sinead McMahon1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current data indicates 70% of adults with obesity report experiencing bias and stigmatisation when engaging with healthcare. Most studies to date, have focused on weight bias from a healthcare professional's perspective. Few have explored weight bias from the perspective of the individual living with obesity and no study has conducted this research in the Irish context. AIMS: This study explored, the lived-in experience of individuals afflicted with obesity, when interacting with the Irish healthcare system. It examined whether participants encountered weight bias and stigma, if so, how it may have impacted them and gathered their suggestions on how it could be best addressed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34843517 PMCID: PMC8629268 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0260075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Table of themes and subthemes.
| Themes (Subthemes) | Summary |
|---|---|
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| ▪ Interpersonal Communication | Verbal and non-verbal communication, including facial micro-expressions of disgust and contempt, accusatory judgemental comments and derogatory language. |
| ▪ Focus of Care | Concerns over medical issues all attributed to obesity and not given due consideration. Presumption among HCPs |
| ▪ Physical Environment | Experiences with various aspects of clinic or hospital environments, mostly relating to clinic space, furniture, medical equipment, and supplies capacity. |
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| ▪ Future Healthcare Interactions | Previous experiences of weight bias in primary and secondary care resulted in missed or cancelled appointments and occasionally, exacerbation of minor ailments to more serious medical issues. |
| ▪ Escalation of Unhealthy Behaviours | Escalation of harmful behaviour related to food, physical inactivity and/or smoking, associated with either personal ambivalence or shame, as a response to being subjected to stigmatisation by a HCP. |
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| ▪ Empathy and Equity | Understanding from HCPs as to how people living with obesity feel and using that understanding to guide actions. Be treated with the same level of professionalism or offered the same care as patients without obesity. |
| ▪ Healthcare Professional Education | Formal obesity education at HCPs entry and graduate level, and training for current HCPs, all devised in collaboration with the patient living with obesity. |
| ▪ Obesity Clinical Pathways | Access to a structured and timely clinical pathway with the opportunity to access specialist services, much earlier on the obesity journey. |
a Healthcare Professionals.