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Blaming people living with obesity can be counterproductive Evidence1 #391400 Blaming people living with obesity creates counterproductive tension between prevention and clinical care. | |
+Citations (4) - CitationsAdd new citationList by: CiterankMapLink[3] Blame, Shame, and Lack of Support A Multilevel Study on Obesity Management
Author: Sara F. L. Kirk, Sheri L. Price, Tarra L. Penney, Laurene Rehman - Renee F. Lyons, Helena Piccinini-Vallis, T. Michael Vallis, Janet Curran, Megan Aston Publication info: 2014 June, Qual Health Res June 2014 vol. 24 no. 6 790-800 Cited by: David Price 9:22 PM 10 May 2015 GMT Citerank: (1) 400009Blaming people living with obesity can be counterproductiveBlaming people living with obesity creates counterproductive tension between prevention and clinical care.648CC79C URL: | Excerpt / Summary In this research, we examined the experiences of individuals living with obesity, the perceptions of health care providers, and the role of social, institutional, and political structures in the management of obesity. We used feminist poststructuralism as the guiding methodology because it questions everyday practices that many of us take for granted. We identified three key themes across the three participant groups: blame as a devastating relation of power, tensions in obesity management and prevention, and the prevailing medical management discourse. Our findings add to a growing body of literature that challenges a number of widely held assumptions about obesity within a health care system that is currently unsupportive of individuals living with obesity. Our identification of these three themes is an important finding in obesity management given the diversity of perspectives across the three groups and the tensions arising among them. |
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