Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7329222 | Social Science & Medicine | 2016 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
Amidst a barrage of policy documents, bio-medical research, and press items concerned with the “crisis” of obesity, a growing scholarship is concerned with what has come to be known as “obesity stigma.” This scholarship hails from a range of sources including critical obesity scholars who problematize the idea of obesity as a health concern, as well as from “mainstream” organizations and researchers who, while maintaining obesity is a world-wide health problem, also argue that “obese” people are the targets of discrimination. In this paper, we analyze both interpretations of obesity stigma, particularly as that stigma applies to obese women's experiences of accessing and receiving reproductive care. We describe a qualitative study conducted with 24 overweight and obese women in 2 Canadian cities. Participants related overt and covert experiences of stigma when accessing reproductive care founded in healthcare practitioners' focus on fetal risk and “mother-blame” which, though partially evidence-based, was interpreted by participants as discriminatory. As such, we maintain that any true interruption of obesity stigma in the reproductive healthcare interaction requires a bridge between critical and mainstream scholarship, and careful attention to the risk-based foci in clinical settings which can be interpreted by clients as moralizing.
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Authors
Andrea E. Bombak, Deborah McPhail, Pamela Ward,