Obesity/Overweight and the Role of Working Conditions: A Qualitative, Participatory Investigation

The rising U.S. prevalence of obesity has generated significant concern and demonstrates striking socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities. Most interventions target individual behaviors, sometimes in combination with improving the physical environment in the community but rarely involving modifi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Health promotion practice 2016-01, Vol.17 (1), p.127-136
Hauptverfasser: Nobrega, Suzanne, Champagne, Nicole, Abreu, Marlene, Goldstein-Gelb, Marcy, Montano, Mirna, Lopez, Isabel, Arevalo, Jonny, Bruce, Suezanne, Punnett, Laura
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container_end_page 136
container_issue 1
container_start_page 127
container_title Health promotion practice
container_volume 17
creator Nobrega, Suzanne
Champagne, Nicole
Abreu, Marlene
Goldstein-Gelb, Marcy
Montano, Mirna
Lopez, Isabel
Arevalo, Jonny
Bruce, Suezanne
Punnett, Laura
description The rising U.S. prevalence of obesity has generated significant concern and demonstrates striking socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities. Most interventions target individual behaviors, sometimes in combination with improving the physical environment in the community but rarely involving modifications of the work environment. With 3.6 million workers earning at or below the federal minimum wage, it is imperative to understand the impact of working conditions on health and weight for lower income workers. To investigate this question, a university–community partnership created a participatory research team and conducted eight focus groups, in English and Spanish, with people holding low-wage jobs in various industries. Analysis of transcripts identified four themes: physically demanding work (illnesses, injuries, leisure-time physical activity), psychosocial work stressors (high demands, low control, low social support, poor treatment), food environment at work (available food choices, kitchen equipment), and time pressure (scheduling, having multiple jobs and responsibilities). Physical and psychosocial features of work were identified as important antecedents for overweight. In particular, nontraditional work shifts and inflexible schedules limited participants’ ability to adhere to public health recommendations for diet and physical activity. Workplace programs to address obesity in low-wage workers must include the effect of working conditions as a fundamental starting point.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
African Americans - psychology
Aged
Community-Based Participatory Research
Community-Institutional Relations
Diet
Exercise
Female
Focus Groups
Healthy Eating & Physical Activity
Hispanic Americans - psychology
Humans
Male
Massachusetts
Middle Aged
Obesity
Organizational Culture
Overweight - psychology
Poverty
Stress, Psychological
Universities
Workplace - psychology
Young Adult
title Obesity/Overweight and the Role of Working Conditions: A Qualitative, Participatory Investigation
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