Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) A. Wutich , C. SturtzSreetharan , Mariana Dimitrov Ulian , Bruno Gualano , Odilon Jose Roble , Ramiro Fernandez Unsain , Maria Regina Carriero , Priscila de Morais Sato , Alexandra Brewis , F.B. Scagliusi
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Universidade de Sao Paulo. Museu de Zoologia
ANO 2020
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Human Organization
ISSN 0018-7259
E-ISSN 1938-3525
EDITORA Publisher 52
DOI 10.17730/1938-3525-79.3.176
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 1DAE711072F33A21D5E89C8256CB0E1C

Resumo

Weight stigma is reportedly globalizing, but there is limited evidence of how concerns around weight change are impacting those in many places. Additionally, few studies to date have considered how weight stigma operates in the context of interventions that purposefully eschew from a focus on weight itself. We have used qualitative analysis to examine body acceptance and responses to weight stigma among urban Brazilian gorda women participating in two forms of Health at Every Size® (HAES®) interventions: an intensive HAES® program (I-HAES®, n=26), which directly addressed weight stigma and a traditional, less-intensive HAES® program (CTRL, n=13). Individual, semi-structured interviews regarding how participants felt about their bodies were conducted post-intervention. Exploratory content analysis followed an inductive approach. The I-HAES®-group was more prone to accept their bodies, to feel well-being, to do new things, and to give proactive responses to weight stigma, while the CTRL-group internalized and accepted stigma, reported a lack of body acceptance, and indicated they were less able to challenge stigma in their lives. Interdisciplinary, intensive HAES® interventions appear able to meaningfully tackle responses to weight stigma and promote body acceptance, important in contexts where stigma is a major component of how women experience their weight.

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