Changing attitudes towards obesity - results from a survey experiment

被引:16
|
作者
Luck-Sikorski, C. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
Riedel-Heller, S. G. [2 ]
Phelan, J. C. [4 ]
机构
[1] Univ Leipzig, Inst Social Med Occupat Hlth & Publ Hlth ISAP, Philipp Rosenthal Str 55, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
[2] Univ Leipzig, Med Ctr, IFB AdiposityDis, Philipp Rosenthal Str 27, D-04103 Leipzig, Germany
[3] SRH Univ Appl Hlth Sci, Neue Str 28-30, D-07548 Gera, Germany
[4] Columbia Univ, Mailman Sch Publ Hlth, 722 W 168th St, New York, NY 10032 USA
来源
BMC PUBLIC HEALTH | 2017年 / 17卷
关键词
Obesity; Public health; Stigmatization; Attitudes; Vignette study; Population-based study; IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST; WEIGHT DISCRIMINATION; PUBLIC-HEALTH; STIGMA; POLICY; OVERWEIGHT; PREJUDICE; RESPONSIBILITY; STIGMATIZATION; METAANALYSIS;
D O I
10.1186/s12889-017-4275-y
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background: This experimental study in a population-based sample aimed to compare attitudes towards obesity following three different causal explanations for obesity (individual behavior, environmental factors, genetic factors). Methods: The data were derived from an online representative sample. A random subsample of n = 407 participants was included. Two independent variables were investigated: cause of obesity as described in the vignette and cause of obesity as perceived by the participant regardless of vignette. Quality features of the vignettes (accuracy and bias of the vignette) were introduced as moderators to regression models. Three stigmarelated outcomes (negative attitudes, blame and social distance) served as dependent variables. Results: Inaccuracy and bias was ascribed to the social environmental and genetic vignettes more often than to the individual cause vignette. Overall, participants preferred individual causes (72.6%). While personal beliefs did not differ between the genetic and environmental cause conditions (Chi(2) = 4.36, p = 0.113), both were different from the distribution seen in the individual cause vignette. Negative attitudes as well as blame were associated with the belief that individuals are responsible for obesity (b = 0.374, p = 0.003; 0.597, p < 0.001), but were not associated with vignette-manipulated causal explanation. The vignette presenting individual responsibility was associated with lower levels of social distance (b = -0.183, p = 0.043). After including perceived inaccuracy and bias as moderators, the individual responsibility vignette was associated with higher levels of blame (emphasis: b = 0.980, p = 0.010; bias: b = 0.778, p = 0.001) and the effect on social distance vanished. Conclusions: This study shows that media and public health campaigns may solidify beliefs that obesity is due to individual causes and consequently increase stigma when presenting individual behavior as a cause of obesity. Public health messages that emphasize the role of social environmental or genetic causes may be ineffective because of entrenched beliefs.
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页数:13
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