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4. Societal influences
Why
1
#349030
The impact of society, for example the influence of the media, education, peer pressure or culture.
Immediately related elements
How this works
-
Foresight â Obesity System Map »
Foresight â Obesity System Map
Foresight â Obesity System MapâObesity occurs when energy intake from food and drink consumption is greater than energy expenditure through the bodyâs metabolism and physical activity over a prolonged period, resulting in the accumulation of excess body fat. However there are many complex behavioural and societal factors that combine to contribute to the causes of obesity.âF1CEB7
■
4. Societal influences
4. Societal influencesâThe impact of society, for example the influence of the media, education, peer pressure or culture.â5CD992
●
Availability of passive entertainment options »
Availability of passive entertainment options
Availability of passive entertainment optionsâAvailability of recreational options that involve only limited physical exercise (tv, computer games).â9FDEF6
●
Acculturation »
Acculturation
AcculturationâDegree to which a (dominant) culture is assimilated.â9FDEF6
●
Childrenâs control of diet »
Childrenâs control of diet
Childrenâs control of dietâDegree to which children exert influence on dietary choices in a family.â9FDEF6
●
Conceptualisation of obesity as a disease »
Conceptualisation of obesity as a disease
Conceptualisation of obesity as a diseaseâDegree to which people consider obesity to be a abnormal deviation from the healthy norm.â9FDEF6
●
Education »
Education
Educationââ9FDEF6
●
Exposure to food advertising »
Exposure to food advertising
Exposure to food advertisingââ9FDEF6
●
Importance of ideal body-size image »
Importance of ideal body-size image
Importance of ideal body-size imageâDegree to which there is a dominant image of an ideal body size in a society.â9FDEF6
●
Media availability »
Media availability
Media availabilityâAvailability of media across formats.â9FDEF6
●
Media consumption »
Media consumption
Media consumptionâDegree to which people make use of the media offerings.â9FDEF6
●
Parental control »
Parental control
Parental controlâLevel of control exerted by parents on childrenâs choices.â9FDEF6
●
Peer pressure »
Peer pressure
Peer pressureâDegree to which average citizens influence one anotherâs choices.â9FDEF6
●
Perceived lack of time »
Perceived lack of time
Perceived lack of timeâBy all citizens, particularly those engaged in economic activity.â9FDEF6
●
Smoking cessation »
Smoking cessation
Smoking cessationâNumber of people quitting smokingâ9FDEF6
●
Social acceptability of fatness »
Social acceptability of fatness
Social acceptability of fatnessââ9FDEF6
●
Social rejection of smoking »
Social rejection of smoking
Social rejection of smokingââ9FDEF6
●
Sociocultural valuation of food »
Sociocultural valuation of food
Sociocultural valuation of foodâDegree to which food is positively valued within a given socio-cultural group.â9FDEF6
●
TV watching »
TV watching
TV watchingâTime spent watching TV.â9FDEF6
►
Advertising and marketing reinforce new eating patterns »
Advertising and marketing reinforce new eating patterns
Advertising and marketing reinforce new eating patterns âMarketing and advertising instil and reinforce new cultural norms about what (e.g. fast food) and how to eat (e.g. snacking), and how much (e.g. larger portions) to eat.âFFFACD
►
Stakeholders â Groups & Actions »
Stakeholders â Groups & Actions
Stakeholders â Groups & ActionsâExplore the map via the different stakeholder groups and the measures each group can take to help tackle the obesity crisis.âFFFACD
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Entrée par:
David Price
NodeID:
#349030
Node type:
Why
Date d'entrée (GMT):
7/31/2014 7:39:00 AM
Date de la derniĂšre modification (Heure GMT):
7/31/2014 7:39:00 AM
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