Internalised Weight Stigma Moderates the Impact of a Stigmatising Prime on Eating in the Absence of Hunger in Higher- but Not Lower-Weight Individuals
Meadows, A; Higgs, S
Date: 8 May 2019
Journal
FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Publisher
Frontiers Media
Publisher DOI
Abstract
A considerable body of evidence links internalised weight stigma with higher levels
of disordered eating behaviour and cognitions in both normative- and higher-weight
populations. However, to date, the impact of internalised weight stigma on objectively
measured food intake has not been explored. In the present study, a weight-div ...
A considerable body of evidence links internalised weight stigma with higher levels
of disordered eating behaviour and cognitions in both normative- and higher-weight
populations. However, to date, the impact of internalised weight stigma on objectively
measured food intake has not been explored. In the present study, a weight-diverse
sample of 158 non-smoking adults (BMI ≥ 25 kg/m2 n = 72, BMI < 25 kg/m2
n = 86) were recruited to a study on “The effects of hunger and satiety on information
processing.” Participants first completed a series of online questionnaires, then attended
a lab visit in a fed state. Participants were randomised to read a sham news article on the
negative consequences of either weight (stigma condition) or smoking (control condition)
and answer some questions about the article. Then, under the pretence of a nonstudy-relevant break, participants were exposed to a pre-weighed selection of sweet
and savoury snacks for 15 min. Mood and hunger levels were assessed prior to and
after reading the vignette, and after the break. In contrast to the relationship with selfreport eating behaviour, internalised weight stigma was not a significant independent
predictor of total energy intake and did not moderate the relationship between exposure
to the stigma prime and calories consumed. However, differences emerged on the basis
of participants’ weight status. Higher-weight participants with high levels of internalised
weight stigma consumed fewer snack calories following exposure to a weight-stigma
prime compared with a neutral prime (B = −137, SE = 58, t = −2.35, p = 0.020, 95%
CI −252, −22) whereas those with low levels of internalised weight stigma tended to
eat more in the weight stigma condition (B = 118, SE = 62, t = 1.91, p = 0.059, 95%
CI −4, 241). In normative-weight participants, no differences in energy intake by levels
of internalised weight stigma were observed. These findings suggest differences in the
relationships between internalised weight stigma and self-reported disordered eating
behaviour versus eating in the absence of hunger (EAH) measured under laboratory
conditions. Additionally, internalised weight stigma appears to have differential effects
on response to stigma in higher-weight and normative-weight individuals.
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