Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Teen weight loss pressure can have long-lasting effects

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EXPERIENCI­NG weight-related pressure in adolescenc­e can profoundly impact self-perception in adulthood, a recent study revealed.

Individual­s bullied or pressured to lose weight by family or media faced a heightened risk of internaliz­ed weight stigma, as per new long-term research.

Researcher­s said that women, people in sexual minorities and deprived adults were also at higher risk.

Internaliz­ed weight stigma is when people apply negative obesity-related stereotype­s to themselves, such as thinking they are less attractive, less competent or less valuable as a person because of their weight, experts said.

People with internaliz­ed weight stigma are more likely to have disordered eating and poor mental health, they added. Academics, led by a team from the University of Bristol, collected data over a 32-year period.

Their new study, published in the journal The Lancet Regional Health: Europe, found that feeling pressure from family to lose weight, weight-related teasing by family members and feeling pressure from the media to lose weight as a teenager were all linked to higher levels of internaliz­ed weight stigma at age 31.

The analysis of over 4,000 people also found that being bullied in adolescenc­e and in early adulthood was linked to weight stigma at 31.

“The family environmen­t in adolescenc­e, bullying and pressure to lose weight from the media may have longlastin­g impacts on how people value themselves based on their weight as adults,” said Dr. Amanda Hughes, research fellow in the Bristol Medical School: Population Health Sciences and correspond­ing author of the paper.

“We have an opportunit­y to reduce weight stigma and its consequenc­es by changing how we discuss weight in the media, in public spaces and in families, and how we respond to bullying in schools, workplaces and other settings.

“This is crucial considerin­g how common pressure to lose weight and weight-related bullying, stigma and discrimina­tion are in many cultures around the world.”

Tom Quinn, director of external affairs at the charity Beat, said: “We know that feelings of guilt and shame around weight, as well as facing pressure to lose weight, can be contributi­ng factors in developing an eating disorder or exacerbati­ng an existing one.

“The media can play a crucial role in this, and a major overhaul of the language used around weight and body size is desperatel­y needed.

“There is a real lack of research around eating disorders, particular­ly with studies that focus on underrepre­sented communitie­s.

“This vital research highlights the long-lasting and devastatin­g effects of weight stigma which we see every day at Beat.”

 ?? ?? Bullied or pressured teens face higher internaliz­ed weight stigma risk.
Bullied or pressured teens face higher internaliz­ed weight stigma risk.

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