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Memorable Messages About Fat Bodies Before, During, and After Pregnancy

Erin D. Basinger, Margaret M. Quinlan, Margaret Rawlings

2022Health Communication68 citationsDOI

Abstract

Weight bias is prevalent for people in large bodies who are trying to conceive, pregnant, or postpartum. Using the theory of memorable messages as a framework, we explored the sources, valence, and content of messages that fat individuals (N = 237) recalled about their bodies before pregnancy through the postpartum stage. The most common source of memorable messages was healthcare providers, and most (77.2%) messages were negatively valenced. Thematic analysis revealed four overarching themes (fat mothers are bad mothers, denial of competent treatment, weight-normative commentary on fat bodies, and weight-inclusive counter-narratives). Our findings illuminate the significance of patient-practitioner communication across the pregnancy trajectory and highlight how counter-narratives can disrupt negative messages about fat pregnancy.

Topics & Concepts

PregnancyNarrativeDenialNormativePsychologyThematic analysisValence (chemistry)ObstetricsDevelopmental psychologySocial psychologyMedicineQualitative researchPsychotherapistSociologyGeneticsPhysicsEpistemologyLinguisticsQuantum mechanicsPhilosophySocial scienceBiologyObesity and Health PracticesEmpathy and Medical EducationEating Disorders and Behaviors
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