Who drives weight stigma? A multinational exploration of clustering characteristics behind weight bias against preconception, pregnant, and postpartum women.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM
International Journal of Obesity Pub Date : 2025-05-01 Epub Date: 2025-01-28 DOI:10.1038/s41366-025-01725-5
Haimanot Hailu, Angela C Incollingo Rodriguez, Anthony Rodriguez, Helen Skouteris, Briony Hill
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Weight bias is a global health challenge and community members are endorsed as the most common source of weight bias. The nature of weight biases specifically against preconception, pregnant, and postpartum (PPP) women from the perspective of community members is not known, especially in terms of cross-cultural trends. We investigated the magnitude of explicit and implicit weight bias and profiles of characteristics associated with harbouring weight bias.

Methods: We conducted a multinational investigation of clusters of factors associated with weight bias against PPP women (May-July 2023). Community members from Australia, Canada, United States (US), United Kingdom (UK), Malaysia, and India completed a cross-sectional survey measuring explicit and implicit weight biases, beliefs about weight controllability, and awareness of sociocultural body ideals. Hierarchical multiple regression and latent profile analyses identified clusters of factors associated with weight bias.

Results: Participants from India reported the lowest explicit weight bias (B = -0.45, p = 0.02). Participants from Australia (B = -0.14, p = 0.04) and the UK (B = -0.16, p = 0.02) (vs. US) reported the lowest implicit weight bias. Three distinct profiles were identified clustering on body mass index (BMI) and weight-controllability beliefs: low-BMI/moderate-beliefs, high-BMI/more biased beliefs, and high-BMI/less biased beliefs. Profile membership varied by country of residence and weight bias outcomes with low-BMI/moderate-beliefs profiles containing more people from non-Western countries and with low explicit weight bias.

Conclusions: Explicit and implicit weight bias was harboured by participants across all included nations, although less pronounced in non-Western countries. Our profiles highlight that individuals who held a stronger belief that weight is controllable, regardless of their body weight, should be targeted for interventions to eliminate weight stigma.

是谁造成了肥胖的耻辱?对孕前、孕妇和产后妇女体重偏差背后的聚类特征的跨国探索。
背景:体重偏见是一项全球性的健康挑战,社区成员被认为是体重偏见最常见的来源。从社区成员的角度来看,特别是从跨文化趋势来看,体重偏见对孕前、怀孕和产后(PPP)妇女的本质尚不清楚。我们调查了显性和隐性权重偏差的大小,以及与怀有权重偏差相关的特征概况。方法:我们进行了一项跨国调查,调查了与PPP女性体重偏见相关的因素群(2023年5月至7月)。来自澳大利亚、加拿大、美国、英国、马来西亚和印度的社区成员完成了一项横断面调查,测量了显性和隐性体重偏见、对体重可控性的信念以及对社会文化身体理想的认识。分层多元回归和潜在剖面分析确定了与权重偏差相关的因素集群。结果:来自印度的参与者报告了最低的显性权重偏差(B = -0.45, p = 0.02)。来自澳大利亚(B = -0.14, p = 0.04)和英国(B = -0.16, p = 0.02)(相对于美国)的参与者报告的隐性权重偏差最低。在体重指数(BMI)和体重可控性信念上发现了三种不同的聚类特征:低BMI/中等信念、高BMI/偏倚信念和高BMI/偏倚信念。概况成员因居住国和体重偏倚结果而异,低bmi /中等信仰概况包含更多来自非西方国家和低显性体重偏倚的人。结论:所有国家的参与者都存在显性和隐性体重偏见,尽管在非西方国家不太明显。我们的概况强调,那些坚信体重是可控的个体,无论其体重如何,都应该成为干预措施的目标,以消除体重耻辱感。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Obesity
International Journal of Obesity 医学-内分泌学与代谢
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
2.00%
发文量
221
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Obesity is a multi-disciplinary forum for research describing basic, clinical and applied studies in biochemistry, physiology, genetics and nutrition, molecular, metabolic, psychological and epidemiological aspects of obesity and related disorders. We publish a range of content types including original research articles, technical reports, reviews, correspondence and brief communications that elaborate on significant advances in the field and cover topical issues.
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