Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes

Summary The obesity crisis is one of the largest public health challenges of the 21st century. Population‐level adiposity has increased dramatically in recent times, and people not recognizing that they have overweight or obesity is now common. It has been widely assumed that not recognizing oneself...

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Main Authors: Eric Robinson, Ashleigh Haynes, Angelina Sutin, Michael Daly
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-10-01
Series:Obesity Science & Practice
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.424
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spelling doaj-2d6d7e4641a5411cb88413261a9d74eb2020-11-25T04:01:38ZengWileyObesity Science & Practice2055-22382020-10-016555256110.1002/osp4.424Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomesEric Robinson0Ashleigh Haynes1Angelina Sutin2Michael Daly3Psychological Sciences University of Liverpool Liverpool UKCentre for Behavioural Research in Cancer Cancer Council Victoria Melbourne VIC AustraliaCollege of Medicine Florida State University Tallahassee Florida USAUCD Geary Institute for Public Policy University College Dublin Dublin IrelandSummary The obesity crisis is one of the largest public health challenges of the 21st century. Population‐level adiposity has increased dramatically in recent times, and people not recognizing that they have overweight or obesity is now common. It has been widely assumed that not recognizing oneself as having overweight is detrimental to weight management and long‐term health. Here, diverse research is reviewed that converges on the counterintuitive conclusion that not recognizing oneself as having overweight is actually associated with more favourable physical and mental health outcomes than recognizing oneself as having overweight. Drawing on existing models in social psychology and weight stigma research, an explanatory model of the health effects of self‐perception of overweight is outlined. This model proposes that self‐perception of overweight triggers social rejection concerns and the internalization of weight stigma, which in turn induce psychological distress and negatively impact health‐promoting lifestyle behaviours. How self‐perception of overweight may in part explain progression from overweight to obesity, and the public health implications of self‐perception of overweight and obesity are also discussed.https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.424obesityself‐regulationstigmaweight perception
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Robinson
Ashleigh Haynes
Angelina Sutin
Michael Daly
spellingShingle Eric Robinson
Ashleigh Haynes
Angelina Sutin
Michael Daly
Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
Obesity Science & Practice
obesity
self‐regulation
stigma
weight perception
author_facet Eric Robinson
Ashleigh Haynes
Angelina Sutin
Michael Daly
author_sort Eric Robinson
title Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
title_short Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
title_full Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
title_fullStr Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
title_full_unstemmed Self‐perception of overweight and obesity: A review of mental and physical health outcomes
title_sort self‐perception of overweight and obesity: a review of mental and physical health outcomes
publisher Wiley
series Obesity Science & Practice
issn 2055-2238
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Summary The obesity crisis is one of the largest public health challenges of the 21st century. Population‐level adiposity has increased dramatically in recent times, and people not recognizing that they have overweight or obesity is now common. It has been widely assumed that not recognizing oneself as having overweight is detrimental to weight management and long‐term health. Here, diverse research is reviewed that converges on the counterintuitive conclusion that not recognizing oneself as having overweight is actually associated with more favourable physical and mental health outcomes than recognizing oneself as having overweight. Drawing on existing models in social psychology and weight stigma research, an explanatory model of the health effects of self‐perception of overweight is outlined. This model proposes that self‐perception of overweight triggers social rejection concerns and the internalization of weight stigma, which in turn induce psychological distress and negatively impact health‐promoting lifestyle behaviours. How self‐perception of overweight may in part explain progression from overweight to obesity, and the public health implications of self‐perception of overweight and obesity are also discussed.
topic obesity
self‐regulation
stigma
weight perception
url https://doi.org/10.1002/osp4.424
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