Rich
Don't Feel Thin Enough
Excerpt
By Serena Gordon, HealthScoutNews
(HealthScoutNews) -- Is it true that you can never be too rich
or too thin?
If you're a woman living in a wealthy neighborhood, you're more
likely to believe the weight part, new research reveals.
The study, published in the February issue of the Journal
of Epidemiology and Community Health, found that women from
wealthier neighborhoods were more unhappy with their bodies than
women from less affluent areas.
"A woman of average weight who lived in an area of above
average affluence had a 71 percent likelihood of being dissatisfied
with her body, versus a 58 percent likelihood of being dissatisfied
if she lived in a neighborhood of average affluence," says
the study's author, Lindsay McLaren, who was at the University
of Montreal in Quebec, Canada, at the time of the study.
Being unhappy with your body may not seem like a big deal, but
body dissatisfaction can have far-reaching health consequences,
experts point out.
"It's a real public health problem," says Dr. Shari
Lusskin, a clinical assistant professor of psychiatry at New York
University School of Medicine. "Women who become obsessively
preoccupied with their body image can resort to self-destructive
means to maintain their body weight at or below their ideal weight."
Women with body dissatisfaction are more likely to have eating
disorders, be depressed, have a lower quality of life, exercise
less and may be less likely to quit smoking, the research found.
For the study, the researchers did phone interview with almost
900 women from 52 Canadian communities. They used census data
to choose neighborhoods that had varying socioeconomic status.
They determined affluent areas to be those in which families averaged
more than $90,000 in income, and average communities as those
with a typical family income of just over $60,000.
The average age of the women was 40 years old, and 53 percent
of them reported being unhappy with their bodies. The more a woman
weighed, the more dissatisfied she was with her body, the researchers
found.
Of the women considered underweight, only 31 percent were dissatisfied
with their physiques. Forty-three percent of women at a healthy
weight reported being unhappy with their looks. That number jumped
to 74 percent for women who were somewhat overweight and was 86
percent for women who were considered overweight.
Surprisingly, McLaren and her colleagues didn't find that an
individual's personal income mattered in predicting body image.
"Our finding was entirely an affect of neighborhood affluence,"
says McLaren.
McLaren believes that in wealthier neighborhoods, the culture
probably magnifies the importance of thinness. Fashion magazines
with waif-thin models, gyms, weight-loss centers and trendy clothing
stores are more prevalent in affluent areas, creating more of
a focus on being thin in these areas, McLaren says.
"There is a cult of thinness," agrees Boston College
sociology professor Sharlene Hesse-Biber. "Women in affluent
neighborhoods constantly bump up against messages to be thin,
like seeing a gym on every corner."
"We have the ability in North America to focus on our weight
because our basic needs for food and shelter have already been
met," explains Lusskin.
Hesse-Biber suggest, however, that the results of the study
should be interpreted with some caution.
This study only looked at how people were feeling at one moment
in time, she point out, adding that it would be interesting to
know whether the women were unhappy with their bodies before they
moved to the affluent neighborhoods.
Without knowing that, she adds, you can't definitively say the
neighborhood is the cause.
What To Do
"Women need to stop measuring their self-worth in pounds,"
says Hesse-Biber. She says women need to ignore the Madison Avenue
message that they are just bodies and stop focusing so much on
outer beauty.
Lusskin says that role models need to change. "If we promote
models and actresses who are grossly underweight, that's what
women will want to be, and the problem will continue to grow."
To learn more about improving your body image, read this article
from the Denver
Family Resource Center.
This article from the National
Women's Health Information Center looks at how your health
can affect your body image.
Reference
Source 89
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