Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander peoples refer to the traditional owners of Australia and have the oldest continuing culture in the world. Body image has scarcely been investigated among adult Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) women, despite evidence that racism and colourism broadly contribute to adverse psychological outcomes for this population. Therefore, we conducted a qualitative study investigating Indigenous womens' body image with specific focus on racism, colourism, and cultural identity. Sixteen Indigenous women completed individual interviews or took part in group yarns - a culturally sanctioned method of information sharing. A reflexive thematic analysis generated three themes: (i) Dominant beauty ideals in Australia exclude Indigenous women and are informed by colonisation and stereotypes of what Indigenous women "should" look like, (ii) Variations in Indigenous women's identities and appearances influences the types of discrimination that they receive and impacts their sense of belonging, and (iii) A change journey occurs over time towards body acceptance which is informed by changes in understandings of body image and cultural identity. Broadly, participants described racism and colourism as negatively impacting their body image. Importantly, developing a strong cultural identity mitigated these impacts by facilitating both a sense of belonging and body acceptance - highlighting a potential protective factor.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2022.10.003 | DOI Listing |
Invest Radiol
January 2025
From the Department of Radiology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA (K.W., M.J.M., A.M.L., A.B.S., A.J.H., D.B.E., R.L.B.); Department of Radiology and Biomedical Imaging, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA (K.W.); GE HealthCare, Houston, TX (X.W.); GE HealthCare, Boston, MA (A.G.); and GE HealthCare, Menlo Park, CA (P.L.).
Objectives: Pancreatic diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) has numerous clinical applications, but conventional single-shot methods suffer from off resonance-induced artifacts like distortion and blurring while cardiovascular motion-induced phase inconsistency leads to quantitative errors and signal loss, limiting its utility. Multishot DWI (msDWI) offers reduced image distortion and blurring relative to single-shot methods but increases sensitivity to motion artifacts. Motion-compensated diffusion-encoding gradients (MCGs) reduce motion artifacts and could improve motion robustness of msDWI but come with the cost of extended echo time, further reducing signal.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCureus
December 2024
Department of Radiological Technology, Fujieda Municipal General Hospital, Fujieda, JPN.
Purpose This study aimed to clarify which positions are beneficial for patients with pathological lung diseases, such as acute respiratory distress syndrome, by obtaining lung ventilation and deformable vector field (DVF) images using Deformable Image Registration (DIR). Methods Thirteen healthy volunteers (5 female, 8 male) provided informed consent to participate to observe changes in normal lungs. DIR imaging was processed using the B-spline algorithm to obtain BH-CTVI (inhale, exhale) in four body positions (supine, prone, right lateral, left lateral) using DIR-based breath-hold CT ventilation imaging (BH-CTVI).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Nurs Health Care Res (Lisle)
October 2024
Helfgott Research Institute, National University of Natural Medicine, Portland, OR, USA.
Introduction: Binge Eating Disorder (BED) has high lifetime prevalence rates, low treatment success rates, and high rates of treatment dissatisfaction, early discontinuation of care, and recurrence. Complementary and integrative health (CIH) interventions (non-mainstream practices used with conventional approaches for whole-person treatment) hold potential to overcome many treatment barriers and improve BED treatment outcomes. Some CIH interventions have empirical support for use in eating disorders.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFForensic Sci Med Pathol
January 2025
Adelaide School of Biomedicine, The University of Adelaide and Forensic Science SA, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Tattooing refers to the process of creating indelible designs and texts in the human skin by introducing a variety of dyes. It has found for millennia in a range of societies. The purpose of tattooing has ranged from marking individuals of significant social standing such as chieftains in Polynesia, to those who are regarded as outcasts such as prostitutes and criminals in Europe.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur Eat Disord Rev
January 2025
Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.
Objective: Anorexia nervosa (AN) is associated with disturbances in reward processing, cognitive control, and body image perception, implicating striatal dysfunction. Evidence suggests that underweight may modulate brain function in AN. We aimed to investigate whole-brain resting-state functional connectivity (rsFC) of the striatum in patients with AN while controlling for the acute effects of underweight.
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