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Weighing it up: the missing social inequalities dimension in Australian obesity policy discourse.

Version 2 2024-06-13, 10:26
Version 1 2017-05-11, 15:15
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 10:26 authored by A Olsen, J Dixon, C Banwell, P Baker
ISSUE ADDRESSED: Debate on obesity spans complex health and social issues drawing on varying representations of fat bodies. This paper seeks to determine whether the recent public health focus on social inequalities is reflected in broader policy debate on obesity. METHODS: We reviewed public submissions to the 2008 Australian House Standing Committee on Health and Ageing inquiry into obesity. Using a qualitative framing approach we categorised the 95 submissions, analysing a sample of 20 of them, thereby, elucidating attitudes to obesity held by a range of interested stakeholders. RESULTS: Two primary frames and one lesser frame were identified. While it was common for contributors to situate obesity as a problem of individuals, it was equally common for contributors to draw on environmental level arguments where obesity is located in structural forces outside of the individual. The range of attributing factors reflects disagreement as to the causes of obesity, although adherents to both the individual and environmental frames called for more government regulation and financial support. Only two submissions directed policy reform to issues of inequality. CONCLUSIONS: Empirically, this study represents a novel investigation of the role of public health ethics in obesity debate and policy. Politically, we highlight the relative lack of explicit attention given to inequality in the debate, even though social inequalities are demonstrably relevant.

History

Journal

Health Promot J Austr

Volume

20

Pagination

167-171

Location

Australia

ISSN

1036-1073

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

CSIRO Publishing, 2009

Issue

3

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing