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Merged Time 1 and Time2 346cases Weight stigma Self-efficacy Study.sav (310.99 kB)

Weight controllability effects on prejudice and self-efficacy (Time 1 and 2)

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posted on 2015-11-04, 05:31 authored by Einar ThorsteinssonEinar Thorsteinsson, Dana Breadsell, Natasha M Loi

An experiment was conducted to test for the presence of prejudice towards obesity and whether weight controllability information reduces this prejudice and impacts on a person’s own healthy weight management. The experiment randomly allocated 346 participants (49 males) into one of three conditions: controllable contributors toward obesity condition (e.g., information about personal control about diet and exercise); uncontrollable contributors toward obesity condition (e.g., information about genes, factors in society); and a control condition with no information given. Using randomised control trial design and pre- and post-measures, the present study addressed many methodological issues present in previous studies. Prejudice was present in 81% of the sample. Weight controllability information had no significant effect on prejudice levels or exercise or healthy eating self-efficacy levels. A negative relationship was found between prejudice towards obesity and level of exercise and healthy eating self-efficacy. Weight status was negatively related to level of prejudice towards obesity and positively related to exercise and healthy eating self-efficacy. These findings suggest that future studies modelling causal factors in obesity may need to incorporate measures of healthy eating self-efficacy and prejudice. (abstract from from published article https://peerj.com/articles/1764/)

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