Beyond Age, BMI, Gender Identity, and Gender Minority Stress, Weight Bias Internalization Is Uniquely Associated With More Eating and Body Image Disturbances and Poor Physical and Mental Health in Chinese Gender-Diverse Adults

IF 4.7 2区 医学 Q1 NUTRITION & DIETETICS International Journal of Eating Disorders Pub Date : 2024-08-23 DOI:10.1002/eat.24278
Wesley R. Barnhart, Yueyang Xiao, Yijing Li, Christina Gaggiano, Zexuan Jiang, Shijia Wu, Hongjian Cao, Jinbo He
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Abstract

Objective

Weight bias internalization (WBI) is a robust, positive correlate of negative health outcomes; however, this evidence base primarily reflects cisgender individuals from Western cultural contexts. Gender-diverse individuals from non-Western cultural contexts (e.g., China) are at potentially high risk for WBI. Yet, no research has examined WBI and associated negative health consequences in this historically underrepresented population.

Method

A cross-sectional, online survey sampled Chinese gender-diverse individuals (N = 410, M age = 22.33 years). Variables were self-reported, including demographics, WBI, body shame, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating, physical and mental health status, and gender minority stress (e.g., internalized cisgenderism). Analyses included correlations and multiple hierarchical regressions.

Results

Pearson bivariate correlations demonstrated associations between higher WBI and more eating and body image disturbances and poor physical and mental health. After adjusting for age, BMI, gender identity, and gender minority stress, higher WBI was uniquely and positively associated with higher body shame, higher body dissatisfaction, higher disordered eating, and poor physical and mental health. Notably, WBI accounted for more unique variance in eating and body image disturbances (13%–25% explained by WBI) than physical and mental health (1%–4% explained by WBI).

Discussion

While replication with longitudinal and experimental designs is needed to speak to the temporal dynamics and causality, our findings identify WBI as a unique, meaningful correlate of eating and body image disturbances in Chinese gender-diverse adults.

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除了年龄、体重指数、性别认同和性别少数压力之外,体重偏差内化与中国性别多元化成年人更多的进食和身体形象障碍以及不良身心健康有着独特的关联。
目的:体重偏差内化(WBI)是负面健康结果的一个强有力的正相关因素;然而,这一证据基础主要反映的是西方文化背景下的顺性别个体。来自非西方文化背景(如中国)的性别多元化个体可能是体重偏差内化的高危人群。然而,目前还没有研究对这一历史上代表性不足的人群的 WBI 及其相关负面健康后果进行研究:方法:一项横断面在线调查抽取了中国不同性别的个人(N = 410,年龄 = 22.33 岁)。变量均为自我报告,包括人口统计学、WBI、身体羞耻感、身体不满意度、饮食紊乱、身心健康状况和性别少数压力(如内化的顺性别主义)。分析包括相关分析和多重分层回归分析:皮尔逊双变量相关性表明,WBI 越高,饮食和身体形象障碍越多,身心健康状况越差。在对年龄、体重指数、性别认同和性别少数压力进行调整后,较高的 WBI 与较高的身体羞耻感、较高的身体不满意度、较高的饮食紊乱以及较差的身心健康之间存在独特的正相关。值得注意的是,WBI 在饮食和身体形象障碍(WBI 解释了 13%-25%)方面比身心健康(WBI 解释了 1%-4%)方面的独特变异更大:讨论:虽然需要通过纵向和实验设计来验证时间动态和因果关系,但我们的研究结果表明,WBI 是中国不同性别成年人饮食和身体形象障碍的一个独特的、有意义的相关因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
12.70%
发文量
204
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Articles featured in the journal describe state-of-the-art scientific research on theory, methodology, etiology, clinical practice, and policy related to eating disorders, as well as contributions that facilitate scholarly critique and discussion of science and practice in the field. Theoretical and empirical work on obesity or healthy eating falls within the journal’s scope inasmuch as it facilitates the advancement of efforts to describe and understand, prevent, or treat eating disorders. IJED welcomes submissions from all regions of the world and representing all levels of inquiry (including basic science, clinical trials, implementation research, and dissemination studies), and across a full range of scientific methods, disciplines, and approaches.
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