| Literature DB >> 35088253 |
Grace F Chao1,2,3, Adrian Diaz4,5,6, Amir A Ghaferi7,8, Justin B Dimick7,8, Mary E Byrnes7,8.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The obesity epidemic poses serious challenges to health equity. Despite bariatric surgery being one of the most effective obesity treatments, utilization remains low. In this context, we explored public perceptions of bariatric surgery, centering voices of Black individuals.Entities:
Keywords: Bariatric surgery; Community health; Obesity stigma
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35088253 PMCID: PMC8794039 DOI: 10.1007/s11695-022-05928-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Obes Surg ISSN: 0960-8923 Impact factor: 3.479
Participant characteristics
| Characteristics | Participants, |
|---|---|
| Race/Ethnicity, no. (%) | |
| Black or African American | 23 (72%) |
| Hispanic | 1 (3%) |
| Pacific Islander | 1 (3%) |
| Mixed Race (Ghanaian White) | 1 (3%) |
| White | 6 (19%) |
| Sex, no. (%) | |
| Female | 28 (88%) |
| Male | 4 (12%) |
| Age, years, mean (SD) | 47.8 (12.8) |
| Age range, no. (%) | |
| < 45 | 15 (47%) |
| 45–65 | 13 (41%) |
| > 65 | 4 (13%) |
| Occupation, no. (%) | |
| Not working | 3 (9%) |
| Retired | 2 (6%) |
| Student | 1 (3%) |
| Working full-time | 21 (66%) |
| Working part-time | 5 (16%) |
| Insurance type, no. (%) | |
| Private insurance | 18 (56%) |
| Medicaid or Medicare | 10 (31%) |
| No insurance | 0 (0%) |
| Did not specify | 4 (13%) |
Note: Participants self-identified all presented demographic information in the table
Fig. 1Conceptual framework for obesity stigma as a prism to understand community member perceptions of weight loss and bariatric surgery. The figure depicts the conceptual framework for how obesity stigma applied to participants themselves and others who chose bariatric surgery caused participants to reject bariatric surgery as a potential treatment for themselves
Stigmatized thoughts about self
| Theme | Exemplars |
|---|---|
| Stigma devalues individuals with obesity which participants internalized. | I know right now, and just from my experience, how people perceive you. The perception is, okay, this guy doesn’t want to work out. He doesn’t, he’s not going to do things like walk, or, you know, he’s big and whatnot and how, your attractiveness tends to go down towards. (Terrell, 49, Male, African American) And for people that I’m closer with, like if I have a conversation of like, well, yeah, like I know these things. Like that’s why I also like hate going to a dietitian because I’m like I actually know all of this stuff…I just don’t do it, for various reasons. (Kyle, 37, Male, White) See, I’ve always been health conscious. I’ve had memberships all through the years at different health clubs, so I’ve always tried to stay in shape. Only in the last ten years did I get kind of off, you know…I don’t know what I want to blame that on…And you know you’ve got to do the work. It’s not going to happen by itself. (Christy, 68 Female, African American) |
| Because obesity is due to failure of personal responsibility, the socially acceptable way to become healthy is to personally discipline the body. | Yeah, the focus on you. Rather than saying, okay, let’s help him with this problem, they were sort of like, let’s just see how far across the finish line he’s willing to go. (Terrell, 49, Male, African American) No, not really. I just, you know, know what I think and what I feel like I should do. Like I say, at this weight that I am now, I just try to work on it. I don’t want to get to be, you know, three, over, I just don’t want to get any bigger than I am now, so I definitely wouldn’t consider bariatric surgery. I would try to work on it now, yeah. (Donna, 64, Female, Black) I don’t know if I ever would [get bariatric surgery]… I think the discipline that I watched her have to have would be where I would want to go with just like the pre-surgery weight loss. (Donnie, 47, Female, African American) Because there’s people around me who were talking about it [bariatric surgery], coworkers. Again, my cousin, my friend were talking about it. I was like, oh, okay. And I did some research…I just felt I hadn’t tried a lot of things and put forth a lot of effort and things. So until I truly felt that I put in the work and nothing came of it, then I would say, okay, now this is the last resort. Let me look into this as far as getting rid of my diabetes or something like that. But I just don’t feel like I’ve done enough. (Latoria, 33, Female, African American) Because I honestly felt like my friend, one of my friends who lives in [location] who had [bariatric surgery], I was, she was, at one time, she was doing aerobics, she was hiking, very active. And I said, why are you doing that? You know how to change your diet and exercise. You don’t need to do that. But I understand why she did it though. (Kim, 55, Female, African American) |
Note: With each exemplar quotation is the participant-identified pseudonym, age in years, sex, and race
Stigmatized thoughts about others, those who undergo bariatric surgery
| Theme | Exemplars |
|---|---|
| Participants saw themselves as separate from people who needed bariatric surgery, people who were “beyond help.” | But then you get the ones [on the television show] that give up, and they just be like, I can’t do it, you know. I’m just going to eat myself to death. I don’t want to be that person. (Paulina, 44, Female, African American) You know, I don’t know that maybe after liposuction if I wanted bariatric surgery to be a small one now, or to reduce the size of my stomach. I’m not really an over eater. I don’t feel like tremendously overeating. (Vicky, 49, Female, Ghanaian White) So like I try not to pass judgment, because like one of me and my sister’s favorite show is like My 600-lb Life, and I’m like, no. And how do you say like you just feel so amazing when you eat food and how you don’t stop it? How are they enabling them? But then it’s like still judgment, because I don’t, you know, I don’t understand it. (Takayla, 31 Female Black) One friend I was worried about…because she has been heavy all her life. [S]he always looks for quick fixes, in my opinion, in everything in her life. (Kim, 55 Female African American) I think [my friend] had to lose like a certain amount of weight [for bariatric surgery]…[But] really, if we just did diet and lifestyle changes, we would be fine. You know, we weren’t like beyond help or anything like that. (Elizabeth, 35 Female White) It almost seems like too easy of a fix…I wanted to find the strength within myself…and have that as a backup…[S]ometimes it’s kind of nice to pop in [to My coworker, when he was talking about his aunt, oh, yeah, he was definitely negative because he was basically saying like, you know, she’s not, she got the surgery, but she’s not really trying. (Michelle, 34, Female, Black) |
Participant perceptions of bariatric surgery as cheating
| Theme | Exemplar quotes |
|---|---|
| Bariatric surgery is cheating. | So there’s some sort of stigma that if you have surgery you cheated or something. (Charo, 66 years old, Female, Hispanic) I think I was just more surprised that she had decided to go that route [referring to best friend getting bariatric surgery]. I’ve watched her kind of diet and lose weight…It felt like, you know, it almost felt kind of like she was giving up. (Donnie, 47, Female, African American) After the fact, like I said, like I’m not having success with doing it myself, quick fix in a sense too, you know, gaining control. (Takayla, 31, Female, Black) [C]ertainly like thinner people will have this idea like it’s like cheating, it’s like an easy way out. Like you should just exercise or eat right. Like I do it, you should too. So it’s kind of this like similar thing with how we see pick yourself up by the bootstraps, economically, kind of thing. (Kyle, 37, Male, White) I think for myself, for me, I’ve got kind of let it go. I’m over it at that point. But I know just like, oh, she was lazy. You know, or she could have tried harder. She took the easy way out, you know. So I think things like that I also think that, you know, hold us up from getting it done. (Richara, 31, Female, African American) |
| Bariatric surgery would lead to fear of being discovered as a cheater. | [M]y stepdaughter went to Dominican Republic and had her entire body reconfigured. And she didn’t really tell anybody…she says, ‘And I’ve never had surgery. It’s sort of like a badge of honor that this is, you did this all on your own, and you haven’t had any help…So there’s some sort of stigma that if you have surgery you cheated or something. (Charo, 66 years old, Female, Hispanic) I think it was just like, I think in the beginning, people were just afraid to say that they were having bariatric surgery, you know. And I think until like stars and celebrities started coming out to actually say that, oh, yeah, I couldn’t actually diet. Like there’s no way, you know, I can keep this weight off naturally. (LaKeisha, 40, Female, Black) I would probably talk to [friend’s daughter who had bariatric surgery] about how it’s going for her. But I don’t want her to feel, because, see, that’s the thing, the thing with the stigma. I don’t want her to feel bad that I’m asking her about it. (Bettina, 52, Female, Black) I guess people want to remain private, and just like the lady that I know that passed away, that’s why she went to a second-rate hospital, because she didn’t want anybody to know. Because she was a well-known figure in the city of [city], and she didn’t want anybody to [know, and] it cost her life. (Sandra, 64, Female, African American) |