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Pressure to Lose Weight in Adolescence Linked to How People Value Themselves Decades Later
People who, as teenagers, felt pressure to lose weight from family or from the media—particularly females, people who aren’t heterosexual, and people experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage—are most at risk of “internalized” weight stigma, new research led by the University of Bristol has found. The study is published in The Lancet Regional Health Europe.
Internalized weight stigma is when people apply negative obesity-related stereotypes to themselves, such as thinking they’re less attractive, less competent, or less valuable as a person because of their weight. This is the first time a study has used a large UK sample to examine who’s most at risk.
In England, around one in four people are living with obesity, but it’s highly stigmatized. Negative obesity-related stereotypes and weight-related discrimination are widespread in society. Experience of weight stigma is a major public health issue: people affected by weight stigma are more likely to have poor mental health and eating disorders and may delay seeking medical treatment. However, little is known about which population groups are at higher risk of internalized weight stigma because previous research has used small, nonrepresentative samples.
Using data from Bristol’s Children of the 90s (also known as the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children), researchers examined differences in internalized weight stigma in over 4,000 people aged 31 years by sex, ethnicity, socioeconomic factors, sexual orientation, and family and wider social influences in childhood and adolescence.
The research found that feeling pressure from family to lose weight, weight-related teasing by family members and feeling pressure from the media to lose weight as a teenager were all linked to higher levels of internalized weight stigma at age 31, and this wasn’t explained by differences in BMI. Being bullied in adolescence (at age 17 years) and adulthood (at age 23 years) were also independently linked to internalized weight stigma at age 31.
The study also found there are clear differences in internalized weight stigma between other groups of the population, which were also not explained by differences in BMI. Females and people who don’t identify as heterosexual are at greater risk of internalized weight stigma. People who had spent more of their 20s as NEETs (not in education, employment, or training) or whose mothers had fewer educational qualifications are also more at risk of internalized weight stigma.
Amanda Hughes, MSc, PhD, a research fellow in the Bristol Medical School department of population health sciences and corresponding author, says: “The family environment in adolescence, bullying, and pressure to lose weight from the media may have long-lasting impacts on how people value themselves based on their weight as adults.
“We have an opportunity to reduce weight stigma and its consequences by changing how we discuss weight in the media, in public spaces, and in families, and how we respond to bullying in schools, workplaces, and other settings.
“This is crucial considering how common pressure to lose weight and weight-related bullying, stigma, and discrimination are in many cultures around the world.”
The researchers now plan to explore in detail the psychological processes by which these social factors may influence internalized weight stigma.
Source: University of Bristol