Doctors
Must Examine Own Weight Bias Before Treating Patients, Researcher Says
- October 22, 2014
- By: David Bauman
- Category: Science & Health
In
January, as one of the first major initiatives of the Academic Vision, the Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity will move to
UConn from Yale University. The move will allow Rudd faculty to
expand their work and build new collaborations with UConn experts on nutrition,
public policy, psychology, agriculture, economics, and obesity.
Every
Wednesday throughout this semester, read about the cutting-edge work
spearheaded by UConn and Rudd investigators.
Doctors
must examine their own weight bias before treating patients, according to
researcher Rebecca Puhl. (Rudd Center Photo)
In the
war on obesity, the medical profession is needed on the front lines. Yet there
is mounting concern that some practitioners harbor a negative weight bias.
Research
has found that some obese patients are reluctant to seek medical attention
because of feeling judged or disrespected about their weight, says Rebecca
Puhl, deputy director and senior research scientist at the Rudd Center and
senior research scientist at CHIP, who is joining UConn’s Department of Human
Development and Family Studies.
“Adults
who have obesity report doctors to be one of the most common sources of weight
stigma they experience,” she says. “Recent evidence also indicates that being
stigmatized or shamed about one’s weight really has a damaging impact on
emotional and physical health, and can actually increase the risk of obesity
and remaining obese over time.”
Rebecca
Puhl, deputy director and senior research scientist at the Rudd Center and
senior research scientist at CHIP. (Rudd Center Photo)
For the
past 14 years, Puhl has conducted research on weight bias, focusing on its
impact on health and potential policy remedies to address this problem.
Biases
among medical professionals may stem in part from inadequate training, says
Puhl. There is very little training for obesity in medical schools and when it
comes to talking about weight, it can be a difficult conversation for both
physicians and patients.
In an
effort to change the way the medical community deals with the issue, the
American Medical Association recently classified obesity as a “disease.”
Defined as a medical condition, obesity is when body fat accumulates to the
point where it can have a negative effect on one’s health, including heart
disease/cholesterol; high blood pressure; type 2 diabetes; sleep apnea; and a
number of cancers.
“For
health care providers, weight stigma is an important clinical concern when we
consider that two-thirds of Americans are affected by either overweight or
obesity,“ says Puhl. “Education and increased awareness of weight bias are
needed both at the medical school level and for those already in clinical
practice.”
In
response to this problem, the Rudd Center has created several evidence-based training films that address
weight bias among health providers and what they can do to reduce these
barriers in clinical practice. These films are being used in medical school
across the country and as required training for health providers and staff in
health care facilities and bariatric surgery centers, Puhl says.
Puhl also
developed an online course to educate health providers about weight bias, with
strategies that they can use to improve their interactions with patients who
have obesity and enhance the delivery of care. “Part of the course includes practical strategies such as how to have a
productive, respectful conversation about weight with a patient who is
struggling with obesity, in a way that is not stigmatizing,” she says.
Next
month, Puhl will speak about her efforts at the national annual meeting of the
Obesity Society in Boston. The weeklong conference brings together the nation’s
top experts to present their work in obesity research, prevention, and
treatment. Puhl is slated as a keynote speaker and will deliver a talk with the
title “Addressing Obesity Stigma in Health Care: Challenges, Remedies, and
Implications for Bariatric Care.”
Reducing
weight prejudice will require shifting societal attitudes and potentially
policy-level strategies, she says.
“We live
in a culture where weight bias and prejudice are socially acceptable, rarely
challenged, and often ignored,” she notes. “There are widespread perceptions
that an individual who has obesity is lazy, sloppy, and lacking in self
control, will-power, and discipline. These negative stereotypes fuel broader
prejudice and unfair treatment.”
The
damage caused by this kind of bias and prejudice is underreported, Puhl says.
She cites a 2012 Rudd Center study of more than 2,800 Americans that found that
reports of weight discrimination jumped 66 percent in a decade, and are on a
par with rates of racial discrimination among women.
“Obesity
is a very complex condition and certainly personal behavior is one piece of the
puzzle, but if we focus only on that one piece, the puzzle will never be
solved, and blame and stigma will continue to thrive,” Puhl says. “We really
have to look at the broader societal factors that contribute to obesity, and
recognize that stigma is a significant barrier to effective prevention and
treatment for obesity.”
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