News May
Many Would Rather Be Anything but Obese
What would you be willing to sacrifice if it ensured you would
never be fat?
Would you give up a year of your life? Or 10 years?
Would you rather be divorced, unable to have children, depressed,
alcoholic?
A disturbing new study out of Yale University's Rudd Center for
Food Policy and Obesity found that nearly half — 46 percent
— of 4,283 participants would rather give up a year of their
life than be obese. Fifteen percent were willing to give up 10 years.
In fact, a surprisingly large number of participants were willing
to make extreme sacrifices if they could be sure they would never
be obese.
These are hypothetical questions, of course, and the answers are
not set in stone. Obesity is a killer, so some participants probably
figured that they were going to die earlier anyway if they were
obese, but what surprised the researchers was the number of people
who were willing to make extreme sacrifices.
"The percentages of people willing to make extreme sacrifices
were much lower," said psychologist Marlene Schwartz, associate
director of the center and lead author in a report in the journal
Obesity. "But what struck me was given how big our sample size
was, there's still a significant number of people who would give
up a lot in order not to be obese."
More than 600 persons, for example, were willing to give up 10
years of their life. And, 342 said they would rather have a learning-disabled
child than an obese child.
The findings show the enormous stigma placed on being fat, and
that, Schwartz says, is one of the major reasons why some people
just can't take it off.
One part of the online study examined subconscious attitudes toward
obesity and found that across the board, regardless of age or body
weight of the participants, "individuals more strongly associated
fat people with bad and thin people with good," the report
said.
Fat people are seen as lazy and unwilling to try hard enough to
lose weight.
That, Schwartz says, is a big part of the problem. Even overweight
participants in the study thought poorly of themselves, and once
that level of self-condemnation is reached, it becomes nearly impossible
to lose weight.
Source: http://abcnews.go.com
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