AI Article Synopsis

  • Weight stigma, particularly negative views about fatness, is linked to disordered eating behaviors in men, specifically muscle dysmorphia (MD), which is a preoccupation with achieving a muscular ideal.
  • A study involving 269 U.S. men examined how these anti-fat attitudes relate to symptoms of MD over time, using multiple surveys spaced a month apart.
  • Findings showed that beliefs about fat people lacking willpower were connected to desires for greater muscle size, and struggles with MD symptoms could lead to fears of gaining weight, suggesting treating weight stigma may help alleviate MD issues in male patients.

Article Abstract

Weight stigma, and more specifically, anti-fat attitudes, is associated with disordered eating. Furthermore, these anti-fat attitudes influence various appearance ideals. Muscle dysmorphia (MD) is characterized by preoccupation with the muscular ideal and is a potential form of disordered eating commonly experienced by men. Despite theory suggesting that anti-fat attitudes may contribute to MD, research has yet to examine associations between anti-fat attitudes and MD symptoms. Therefore, the current study investigated longitudinal relationships between anti-fat attitudes and MD symptoms. Participants were 269 U.S. men recruited from Prolific who completed three self-report surveys each separated by one month. Primary analyses examined longitudinal relationships between specific anti-fat attitudes and MD symptoms using an adapted three-wave cross-lagged panel model. Results demonstrated that believing that fat people do not have willpower was longitudinally associated with desires to increase muscle size at multiple time points. Furthermore, MD-specific functional impairment predicted fears of becoming fat longitudinally. Practically, men may desire to increase their muscularity to demonstrate their own willpower and distance themselves from anti-fat stereotypes. Thus, clinicians may consider targeting weight stigmatizing attitudes to reduce MD symptom severity among their male clients.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bodyim.2024.101786DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Weight stigma, particularly negative views about fatness, is linked to disordered eating behaviors in men, specifically muscle dysmorphia (MD), which is a preoccupation with achieving a muscular ideal.
  • A study involving 269 U.S. men examined how these anti-fat attitudes relate to symptoms of MD over time, using multiple surveys spaced a month apart.
  • Findings showed that beliefs about fat people lacking willpower were connected to desires for greater muscle size, and struggles with MD symptoms could lead to fears of gaining weight, suggesting treating weight stigma may help alleviate MD issues in male patients.
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Background: Weight stigma refers to the social rejection, discrimination, and ideological devaluation of individuals because of body size and is a direct result of weight bias and anti-fat attitudes. Individuals with higher weight may be less likely to seek healthcare due to weight stigma, and if or when they do present for care, medical providers with weight bias may fail to provide high quality care. Little, however, is known about the intersectionality of weight stigma and perceptions of healthcare interactions as experienced by individuals who also binge eat.

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Objective: Commonly used terms like "obese person" have been identified as stigmatizing by those with lived experience. Thus, this study sought to revise a commonly used measure of weight stigmatizing attitudes, the Attitudes Toward Obese Persons (ATOP) scale.

Methods: The original terminology in the 20-item ATOP (e.

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Background This study aimed to establish the reliability and validity of the Anti-Fat Attitudes (AFA) questionnaire and the Beliefs About Obese Persons (BAOP) scale. Methodology A convenience sample of 257 students from three distinct sections of the University of Medicine and Pharmacy "Grigore T. Popa" Iasi (Medical Faculty, Nutrition and Dietetics, and Nursing) participated in an observational study.

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Objective: Assess the impact of a weight-inclusive podcast (WIP) intervention on body appreciation, intuitive eating (IE), anti-fat attitudes, and weight and health attitudes in university students enrolled in an upper-division nutrition course.

Methods: Quasi-experimental design: Intervention participants listened to 8 weekly WIP episodes (n = 16); the comparison group listened to 8 weekly general nutrition podcasts (n = 29). Intuitive eating, body appreciation, anti-fat attitudes, and general weight and health attitudes were measured preintervention and postintervention.

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