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Fat talk and body image disturbance : a systematic review and meta-analysis
journal contribution
posted on 2017-03-01, 00:00 authored by Jacqueline Mills, Matthew Fuller-TyszkiewiczMatthew Fuller-TyszkiewiczAlthough the link between fat talk and body dissatisfaction is well established, the link between fat talk and other body image disturbance components remains underexplored. Our meta-analytic review explored the cross-sectional, experimental, and longitudinal relations between fat talk and body dissatisfaction, body surveillance, body shame, pressure to be thin, thin-ideal internalization, body checking, and appearance-based comparisons. We identified 35 relevant studies via electronic databases. Meta-analyses provided effect size estimates based on study design and whether fat talk was the predictor or outcome of body image disturbance. Results showed that fat talk is related to a broader range of body image constructs than just body dissatisfaction and that accumulated evidence from longitudinal and experimental studies—although limited in number—suggests it is more plausible that fat talk is a risk factor for these body image constructs, rather than a consequence of them. Nevertheless, the suggestion that fat talk may play a role in the causal sequence of body image issues highlights this as a potential area of intervention for researchers and clinicians. Given that fat talk is common and often well intentioned, awareness-raising exercises for parents and peers may be necessary to curb its incidence and impacts.
History
Journal
Psychology of women quarterlyVolume
41Issue
1Pagination
114 - 129Publisher
Sage PublicationsLocation
London, Eng.Publisher DOI
ISSN
0361-6843eISSN
1471-6402Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2016, The Author(s)Usage metrics
Categories
Keywords
Social SciencesPsychology, MultidisciplinaryWomen's StudiesPsychologyfat talkbody dissatisfactionbody surveillancebody shamethin-ideal internalizationAPPEARANCE-RELATED COMMUNICATIONPEER INFLUENCESOBJECTIFICATION THEORYPREVENTION PROGRAMSOCIAL COMPARISONSDIETARY RESTRAINT12-YEAR-OLD GIRLSBULIMIC SYMPTOMSADOLESCENT GIRLS