The effects of a teaching intervention on weight bias among kinesiology undergraduate students

Objectives Weight bias is present among kinesiology professionals and this may cause a significant negative impact on their clients with obesity. Thus, our objective was to test if learning about uncontrollable cause of obesity and about weight bias would reduce explicit and implicit weight bias amo...

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Veröffentlicht in:International Journal of Obesity 2019-11, Vol.43 (11), p.2273-2281
Hauptverfasser: Wijayatunga, Nadeeja N., Kim, Youngdeok, Butsch, Winfield S., Dhurandhar, Emily J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objectives Weight bias is present among kinesiology professionals and this may cause a significant negative impact on their clients with obesity. Thus, our objective was to test if learning about uncontrollable cause of obesity and about weight bias would reduce explicit and implicit weight bias among kinesiology undergraduate students compared to the traditional curriculum which is more focused on controllable causes of weight gain. Methods We recruited undergraduates from two classes of the same kinesiology major course taught by the same instructor. In-class teaching activities consisted of 80 min lecture on day 1, video watching session and a group activity on day 3 for both groups. Intervention group ( n  = 33) learned about uncontrollable causes of obesity and about weight bias and had activities to evoke empathy. Control group ( n  = 34) learned the traditional curriculum where they learned the role of exercise and diet in weight management. We measured explicit and implicit weight bias using Anti-Fat Attitude Test (AFAT) and Implicit Association Test (IAT), respectively pre-intervention, immediate post intervention and 1 month later. Results In mixed model analysis, AFAT Blame scores had significant group by time interaction ( p  
ISSN:0307-0565
1476-5497
DOI:10.1038/s41366-019-0325-0