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Obesity Stigma
Individuals affected by obesity are often victims of negative stigma. Obesity stigma is a major issue and is the last socially acceptable form of discrimination in our society.
If you have been a victim of obesity stigma, you are not alone. As a Coalition, the OAC strives to reduce the negative stigma associated with obesity that those affected face on a daily basis. We encourage you to get involved, get educated and do something to make a difference in reducing negative stigma. To get involved, the OAC invites you to visit the OAC Blog (www.oacblog.org) where you can sound off on stigmatizing situations and read other individuals’ experiences.
Obesity Stigma Educational Resources
Information about Obesity Stigma
There are several areas where obesity stigma comes to play. These areas include: employment settings, healthcare and education. In addition, understanding the consequences of weight bias is important in order to help towards reducing this social injustice.
Bias in Employment Settings
Bias in employment settings has been identified in the following areas:
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Hiring Preferences
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Promotions
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Wage Inequities
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Employment Termination
Hiring Preferences
Obese job applicants rated as having:
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Poor self-discipline
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Low supervisory potential
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Poor personal hygiene
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Less ambition & productivity
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Thin applicants preferred over obese applicants
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Obese applicants are more appropriate for jobs requiring little face-to-face contact
Promotions
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Lower promotion prospects compared to non-overweight counterparts
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Managers less likely to recommend obese employee for promotion than other candidates
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Less likely to get hired in high-level positions
Wage Inequities
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Obese women earn 12 percent less than non-obese females
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Obese women more likely to be in low-paying jobs than thinner women
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Obese men under-represented and paid less than non-obese men in managerial and professional positions
Employment Termination
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Fired due to prejudiced employers and arbitrary weight standards
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Fired despite good to excellent employment records in occupations like: teachers, pilots, office managers, state troopers, city laborers
Weight Bias in Healthcare Settings
Bias in healthcare settings has been identified in the following areas:
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Physicians
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Nurses
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Psychologists
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Quality of Care
Physicians
Self-report studies show that Physicians view obese patients as:
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Non-compliant
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Dishonest
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Lazy
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Lacking in self-control
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Weak-willed
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Unintelligent
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Unsuccessful
Doctors are common sources of stigma:
Study: 2449 adult women provided with list of 22 different individuals (family members, employers, doctors, educators, strangers) and asked how often they were sources of weight stigmatization.
Doctors were the second most frequent source reported, with more than 50 percent stating that doctors had stigmatized them on more than one occasion.
Nurses
Self-report studies show that:
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Nurses view obese patients as non-compliant, overindulgent, lazy and unsuccessful
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31 percent “would prefer not to care for obese patients
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24 percent agreed that obese patients “repulsed them”
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12 percent “would prefer not to touch obese patients”
Psychologists
In studies comparing beliefs about obese vs. ‘average’ weight patients, psychologists ascribe obese clients to have:
Quality of Care
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Obese patients less likely to obtain preventive health services and exams, cancer screening tests, pelvic exams and mammograms
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More likely to cancel or delay appointments
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Physicians: less time spent, less intervention, less discussion with obese patient
Bias in Education
Bias in education is expressed through extensive peer victimization at school, bias by teachers and administrators and institutional level weight bias.
Weight Bias by Peers
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Negative attitudes begin as early as preschool
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Obese kids viewed as ugly, stupid, mean, lazy, unhappy, having few friends, undesirable playmates
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Teased by kids & chosen less as playmates
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Continues through high school & college, where obese students are viewed as self-indulgent, lazy and are excluded from peer activities
Peer Victimization
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30 percent of overweight girls and 24 percent of overweight boys are teased by peers at school
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Adolescents at the heaviest weight are most likely to be teased because of their weight. Overall, 63 percent of girls and 58 percent of boys reported peer victimization.
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Being overweight predicts future peer victimization
Bias by Educators
- Untidy
- More emotional
- Less likely to succeed at work
- More likely to have family problems
Educational Institutions
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Less like to be accepted to college, despite equivalent application rates and academic achievement
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Students dismissed from college because of their weight
Consequences of Weight Bias
Taken together, the consequences of being denied jobs, rejected by peers, or treated inappropriately by healthcare professionals because of one’s weight can have a serious and negative impact on quality of life. Obese individuals suffer terribly from this, both from direct discrimination and from more subtle forms of bias and stigma that are frequently encountered.
Weight bias can have psychological, social and physical health consequences on those affected by this disease. Psychological outcomes can include depression, anxiety, low self-esteem, poor body image and much more. The social effects can be social rejection by peers, poor quality of interpersonal relationships and potential negative impact on academic outcomes. The physical health outcomes can include binge-eating and unhealthy weight-control practices.
How Do We Reduce Weight Bias?
Given how pervasive and acceptable weight stigma is in our society, transforming societal attitudes and enacting laws that prohibit discrimination based on weight are needed in order to eliminate the problem of stigma toward obese individuals. Although this requires enormous efforts, there are other important steps that can be taken by both patients and their healthcare providers to help improve the daily functioning and well-being of obese individuals.
Patients who are struggling with weight stigma can begin to approach this problem by becoming advocates for themselves. This includes identifying situations in which they have been stigmatized because of their weight and deciding how best to handle the situation to achieve positive emotional health to help prevent additional stigma from occurring.
Education about obesity and its causes:
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Educate participants about the biological, genetic, and external causes of obesity
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Provide explanations for obesity outside of one’s personal control
Perceptions of other's beliefs:
Learning that others hold more favorable attitudes towards obese people leads to:
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More positive attitudes toward obese persons
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Fewer negative stereotypes about obese persons
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Increased beliefs that causes of obesity are not within personal control
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Attitudes improve more if information comes from a valued peer group
Strategies:
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Educate others about the stigma of obesity to help challenge negative attitudes.
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Obtain social support from others who are struggling with weight stigma, or from friends and family members who are supportive.
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Instead of avoiding enjoyable activities because of negative feelings about your weight, set goals to ease these restrictions and participate more fully in these experiences.
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Rather than feeling inferior, practice positive self-talk strategies that emphasize self-acceptance and positive self-esteem.
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Be vocal about individual needs and positively assert these to appropriate individuals (e.g., requesting larger-sized medical gowns from a healthcare provider).
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Communicate to the perpetrator of bias that his or her comments were inappropriate and hurtful, and that nobody deserves such unkind remarks, regardless of their weight.
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Participate in public groups to protest weight stigmatization. The National Association for the Advancement of Fat Acceptance (NAAFA) is one such advocacy group which promotes size acceptance, fights weight discrimination, and publicly campaigns to challenge stigma.
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Talk to a therapist to help identify effective ways to cope with stigma and to replace self-defeating thoughts or self-blame with healthier ways of coping
The above information was provided by Rebecca Puhl, Ph.D., the Coordinator for Community and Weight Stigma Initiatives at the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University. The original information can be found in Dr. Puhl's presentation, titled "Weight Bias." For more information or to contact Dr. Puhl, please visit the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at www.yaleruddcenter.org/home.aspx. |