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"Being fat is more a social problem than a health problem." Giving voice to children with overweight

Derwig, Mariette LU (2014) p.195-204
Abstract
This essay attempts to explore what being fat means in relation to health and illness for overweight and non-overweight children aged 8-12 years. It illustrates that overweight children experience being fat as a social problem and not merely as a medical or Health problem. Their concept of overweight is influenced by the beliefs that are present in the World around them and the problems they face in their social interactions with parents, friends, other children, teachers and other actors in their daily lives. The overweight children
internalised the health beliefs that overweight is due to eating too much and therefore, predominantly blame themselves for being fat. In this way, they see overweight as a controllable condition. This... (More)
This essay attempts to explore what being fat means in relation to health and illness for overweight and non-overweight children aged 8-12 years. It illustrates that overweight children experience being fat as a social problem and not merely as a medical or Health problem. Their concept of overweight is influenced by the beliefs that are present in the World around them and the problems they face in their social interactions with parents, friends, other children, teachers and other actors in their daily lives. The overweight children
internalised the health beliefs that overweight is due to eating too much and therefore, predominantly blame themselves for being fat. In this way, they see overweight as a controllable condition. This notion may be influenced by their experiences in the Health system, although the dominant belief that being fat is controllable was also present in the focus group discussions with ‘normal weight’ children. All overweight children saw themselves as fat and were dissatisfied with their body size. They shared the desire to become thin and be like other children around them. They attributed positive notions to their
ideal body size, which in all the participating children was slim. In this way, they were also influenced by the present culture of slenderness. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
overweight children,, health, bodu size, medicalisation, Obesity
host publication
Medical anthropology: essays and reflections from an Amsterdam graduate programme
editor
van der Geest, Sjaak ; Gerrits, Trudy and Challinor, Julia
pages
195 - 204
publisher
Diemen: AMB
ISBN
9789079700653
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
94e4bedf-6fe3-4ae0-8065-e067295f93c9
alternative location
https://dare.uva.nl/search?identifier=9811aa20-8d62-4452-b6b6-6b13fe1f74df
date added to LUP
2019-06-19 16:08:52
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:42:44
@inbook{94e4bedf-6fe3-4ae0-8065-e067295f93c9,
  abstract     = {{This essay attempts to explore what being fat means in relation to health and illness for overweight and non-overweight children aged 8-12 years. It illustrates that overweight children experience being fat as a social problem and not merely as a medical or Health problem. Their concept of overweight is influenced by the beliefs that are present in the World around them and the problems they face in their social interactions with parents, friends, other children, teachers and other actors in their daily lives. The overweight children<br/>internalised the health beliefs that overweight is due to eating too much and therefore, predominantly blame themselves for being fat. In this way, they see overweight as a controllable condition. This notion may be influenced by their experiences in the Health system, although the dominant belief that being fat is controllable was also present in the focus group discussions with ‘normal weight’ children. All overweight children saw themselves as fat and were dissatisfied with their body size. They shared the desire to become thin and be like other children around them. They attributed positive notions to their<br/>ideal body size, which in all the participating children was slim. In this way, they were also influenced by the present culture of slenderness.}},
  author       = {{Derwig, Mariette}},
  booktitle    = {{Medical anthropology: essays and reflections from an Amsterdam graduate programme}},
  editor       = {{van der Geest, Sjaak and Gerrits, Trudy and Challinor, Julia}},
  isbn         = {{9789079700653}},
  keywords     = {{overweight children,; health; bodu size; medicalisation; Obesity}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{195--204}},
  publisher    = {{Diemen: AMB}},
  title        = {{"Being fat is more a social problem than a health problem." Giving voice to children with overweight}},
  url          = {{https://dare.uva.nl/search?identifier=9811aa20-8d62-4452-b6b6-6b13fe1f74df}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}