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Culture, health, and bigotry: How exposure to cultural accounts of fatness shape attitudes about health risk, health policies, and weight-based prejudice

We conducted three experiments to examine how cultural frames shape attitudes about health, focusing on obesity, which is considered a public health crisis and is imbued with symbolic meaning. College students (Ns = 99, 114, and 293) read news articles that presented high body weight according to on...

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Published in:Social science & medicine (1982) 2016-09, Vol.165, p.271-279
Main Authors: Frederick, David A., Saguy, Abigail C., Gruys, Kjerstin
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description We conducted three experiments to examine how cultural frames shape attitudes about health, focusing on obesity, which is considered a public health crisis and is imbued with symbolic meaning. College students (Ns = 99, 114, and 293) read news articles that presented high body weight according to one or more of the following frames: 1) public health crisis; 2) personal responsibility; 3) health at every size (HAES); or 4) fat rights. Compared to people who read the HAES and Fat Rights articles, those who read the Public Health Crisis and Personal Responsibility articles expressed more belief in the health risks of being fat (ds = 1.28 to 1.79), belief that fat people should pay more for insurance (ds = 0.53 to 0.71), anti-fat prejudice (ds = 0.61 to 0.69), willingness to discriminate against fat people (ds = 0.41 to 0.59), and less willingness to celebrate body-size diversity (ds = 0.77 to 1.07). They were less willing to say women at the lower end of the obese range could be healthy. Exposure to these articles increased support for price-raising policies to curb obesity but not support for redistributive or compensatory policies. In Experiment 3, in comparison to a control condition, exposure to HAES or Fat Rights frames significantly reduced beliefs in the risks of obesity and support for charging fat people more for insurance. However, only people exposed to the Fat Rights frame expressed fewer anti-fat attitudes and more willingness to celebrate body-size diversity. Our findings suggest that simply disseminating information that people can be both fat and healthy will not suffice to reduce prejudice. Given that anti-fat stigma is a health risk and barrier to collective solidarity, fat rights viewpoints can buffer against the negative consequences of anti-fat stigma and promote a culture of health by fostering empathy and social justice. •Examines how exposure to news accounts of obesity shape attitudes.•Public Health Crisis and Personal Responsibility frames increased prejudice.•Health at Every Size (HAES) and Fat Rights frames reduced beliefs in dangers of obesity.•HAES and Fat Rights frames reduced support for insurance surcharges for the obese.•Reducing prejudice proved difficult, only Fat Rights frames reduced antifat stigma.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.socscimed.2015.12.031
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source International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescent
Anti-fat attitudes
Attitude to Health
Attitudes
Body Image - psychology
Body Weight
College students
Culture
Empathy
Female
Females
Health
Health behavior
Health care policy
Health policy
Health Policy - trends
Human body
Humans
Male
Multiculturalism & pluralism
Obesity
Obesity - psychology
Prejudice
Prejudice - psychology
Public health
Responsibility
Rights
Social justice
Social Stigma
Stigma
Students - psychology
Young Adult
title Culture, health, and bigotry: How exposure to cultural accounts of fatness shape attitudes about health risk, health policies, and weight-based prejudice
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