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Fat phobia study reveals weighty
attitudes
Florida -
While it is no surprise that people often have a low opinion of the
overweight, a new study finds that just standing next to a large
person can be bad for one's image.
The experiment, conducted in England,
demonstrates the depths of stigmatization endured by heavy people: It
even rubs off on their friends.
Trying to combat discrimination
against the overweight is a topic of discussion at this week's meeting
in Fort Lauderdale of the North American Association for the Study of
Obesity, the field's top professional organization.
Even here, though, another study
suggests that obesity specialists themselves may harbor subtle, if
unintentional, negative attitudes toward their patients.
"Weight stigma is powerful, pervasive
and destructive," said Marlene Schwartz, a Yale psychologist.
In the English study, psychologist
Jason Halford and colleagues from the University of Liverpool tested
144 female students' reactions to two prom photos. One showed a
dapper, thin young man standing next to a svelte ringlet-haired woman.
The other was the same photo altered to show the guy arm-in-arm with a
very large, nicely dressed woman.
The volunteers took a quick look at
one or the other of the pictures and then were asked their opinion of
the man. They rated him from 1 to 5 on 50 negative adjectives --
called the "fat phobia scale" -- that people often use to describe
obese people.
The man with the big woman was rated
22 percent more negatively than the same man with the thin companion.
When seen with the large woman, he was more likely to be described as
miserable, self-indulgent, passive, shapeless, depressed, weak,
insignificant and insecure.
"It shows that people project
negative attitudes associated with obesity not only on the obese but
all those who associate with them," Halford said.
The study also found that students
who were themselves overweight were more likely than usual to rate the
man harshly when pictured with the obese partner.
At the same obesity meeting two years
ago, researchers give a word quiz, called an implicit association
test, to about 200 obesity professionals. The test, intended to
measure bias, asks people to quickly link up words like "lazy,"
"stupid" and "worthless" on command with obese or thin people.
The results, described at this year's
meeting, showed that obesity professionals were more apt to link the
negative words with overweight people, even when trying not to.
"These are unconscious attitudes,"
said Heather Chambliss of the Cooper Institute in Dallas.
Carol Johnson of Milwaukee, a large
woman who heads a support organization called Largely Positive, told
the conference that overweight people are often discriminated against
by doctors, who ascribe all their problems to weight and sometimes
withhold standard treatments, like blood pressure pills, that they
freely prescribe to thin patients.
"Society wants no fatties," Johnson
said.
Rebecca Puhl of Yale said bias
against the large begins early in life. Studies show that even
preschoolers are more likely to describe overweight playmates as mean,
ugly or stupid.
She said overweight people are less
likely to get into college, less likely to get hired and more likely
to get fired.
"Expressing negative attitudes toward
obese people has become an acceptable form of bias," she said. --
CNN News
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