Showing posts with label medicine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label medicine. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 20, 2014

Obesity Stigma in Health Care Education

I'm sure I sound like a broken record.

Even though I'm not a physician, I regularly get emails about continuing medical education and "diagnosis of the week" challenges. This one was brought to my attention by a colleague, however.

Here's the email:





It's perfectly acceptable to present an accurate image, even if we don't like it, in medical education. However, there are multiple images available of the rash, including the arm. The image of the large stomach, cropped to ensure the breast is hanging over is the one chosen.

Most correctly identified the diagnosis--erythema ab igne. However, they are then presented with a menu of options for the underlying cause of the diagnosis:



Of course obesity is one of the options. It's an obvious physical characteristic of the patient, even though the patient is otherwise healthy.

But here are the responses by the community (green is correct): 

Most of the doctors respond that obesity is the underlying cause of a relatively uncommon condition that many could identify. Obesity is NOT the correct answer.

This kind of subtle (or overt, depending on your perspective) discrimination against people who are obese is what those people have long claimed to experience in health care. Nearly half of doctors would have told this young man to go lose weight, completely ignoring the real cause of his problem.

Many people with obesity deal with this regularly. While many health complaints may be related to obesity, few, if any, are directly caused only by obesity and nothing else. Obesity may contribute to the severity of some conditions, but many health problems of people with obesity are completely unrelated.

I've often heard people say that the perception of stigmatization in health care is just a perception secondary to a sensitivity towards being judged. But the kind of evidence above, where obesity is blamed when it shouldn't be, tells me that this bias is real. When in doubt, it's easy for doctors to fall back on the most obvious "problem" to fix. This is certainly not the case for all doctors--I know many who work hard to specifically NOT allow such bias to creep into their work.

I hope more doctors will start to realize the danger of blaming obesity for too many health ills. Obesity is incredibly difficult to change, especially without substantial resources unavailable to many. Focusing on health improvement will yield far more successful results.

Wednesday, June 19, 2013

The Stigma of Childhood Obesity





Some colleagues and I recently received a rejection of a letter to the editor of JAMA. When we saw this cover, we were immediately struck by the child in the middle, and decided a letter was needed. I guess I shouldn't be surprised by the rejection, given that JAMA recently rejected another piece of mine on how stigma pervades the medical and scientific communities that work on childhood obesity. (That piece, however, was accepted by another in the JAMA family, JAMA Pediatrics, and will be published July 1.)

The refusal to engage in the discussion is as informative as the original point we were trying to make. Below is the image on the cover, which should link you to Dr. Zylke's description--my apologies to those who can't access it freely. I think our letter was appropriate and true.
 



Image not available. 



Dear Dr. Zylke,


It was with great excitement that child health researchers came across a special issue of JAMA focused on child health last week.  Unfortunately we found this issue’s cover alarming.  The illustration promotes the stigmatization of obesity that has not only pervaded popular culture, but, as so clearly demonstrated here, the research and medical communities, as well.
   
On the cover, we instantly saw a portrayal of an obese child with a large soda-an image that managed to meet all three criteria for defining pejorative images from the Yale Rudd Center for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University media guidelines.1  While you say this image tried to portray “problems stemming from social or environmental issues,” the use of a picture of an individual child with a large soda to reflect the high prevalence of obesity among children is stigmatizing in that it recognizes the individual behavior without also recognizing the larger environmental roots.  

Far more disturbing are the subtleties apparent in the image.  The fact that so many people in the scientific community must have looked at this obese girl—with an awkward facial expression, unflattering clothing, and avoiding the world—as an honest representation of childhood obesity is truly disheartening.  Social constructs of disease place responsibility on different individuals, assigning blame in ways that portray children as either victims or perpetrators.2 On this cover, nearly all these children are either promoters of their own health or “victims” of their diseases, except this child, who is shown as a perpetrator of hers.  

In your description of the cover’s more idyllic images, you quote Norman Rockwell: “I paint life as I would like it to be.” We would like to offer up another of Mr. Rockwell’s quotes: “Right from the beginning, I always strived to capture everything I saw as completely as possible.” The narrow, incomplete and negative view of the obese child so painfully portrayed on the cover demonstrates the narrow, incomplete view that many people have of obese children and obesity itself. 

If we only focus on the doubt and difficulty of changing individual behaviors, we will not reduce the prevalence of obesity as significantly as if we address systemic factors.  Continual perpetuation of stigmatizing images of obese children reinforces beliefs that obesity is a problem driven only by individual behaviors. Such stigma serves to dehumanize obese people, and may even serve to perpetuate obesity itself.3





Asheley Cockrell Skinner, PhD

Stephanie E. Hasty, BA

Eliana M. Perrin, MD MPH 







References






2.         Herek GM, Capitanio JP, Widaman KF. Stigma, social risk, and health policy: public attitudes toward HIV surveillance policies and the social construction of illness. Health Psychology. Sep 2003;22(5):533-540.



3.         Puhl RM, Latner JD. Stigma, obesity, and the health of the nation's children. Psychological Bulletin. Jul 2007;133(4):557-580.




Sunday, January 6, 2013

Inertia

A Forbes article from earlier this month tries to dispel the myth that doctors will only increase their (uncompensated) work burden if they are willing to communicate with patients via email. Personally, I communicate with my physicians via email--I actually go so far as to nearly use that as a criteria when choosing a physician. But I think this form of communication is important for a far greater reason.

The power differential in the doctor-patient relationship is a key factor in how a particular patient's care will proceed, as I've written about before. Email has the benefit of being a low-pressure method of communication, one that doesn't require confident, direct interaction. Many individuals, no matter their background, find it difficult to speak openly with their physician, to ask questions, to be sure they are sharing all of the information and history they should. But email provides an opportunity for the patient to carefully consider what they want to say, and to do outside the pressure of the exam room. Patients may share information--some which might be critical to providing the best care--that might otherwise be left out or simply overlooked.

As technology becomes more and more integrated into all aspects of life, including medicine, health care will have to embrace these changes. People are embracing them. We can't let inertia prevent improvements in care.