2019
DOI: 10.1111/jan.14205
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Intensive care nurses’ implicit and explicit attitudes and their behavioural intentions towards obese intensive care patients

Abstract: Aims To examine qualified intensive care nurses’ implicit and explicit attitudes towards obese intensive care patients and whether their attitudes are associated with their behavioural intentions towards these patients. Background Obese intensive care patients may experience more stress than do normal‐weight patients. Intensive care nurses’ attitudes and the way they address their care are thus vital. Despite a range of studies revealing that health professionals hold anti‐fat attitudes towards obese patients,… Show more

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Cited by 21 publications
(32 citation statements)
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References 53 publications
(134 reference statements)
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“…Healthcare settings have been reported to be one of the sources of weight-stigma [57,58]. Several HPs hold strong negative attitudes about people with obesity [5,59], and this attitude and weight-stigma can reduce the quality of care and weight-management [5,60]. We believe that HPs in general, in healthcare services, have something to learn from HPs in HLCs and their "MIspirit".…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Healthcare settings have been reported to be one of the sources of weight-stigma [57,58]. Several HPs hold strong negative attitudes about people with obesity [5,59], and this attitude and weight-stigma can reduce the quality of care and weight-management [5,60]. We believe that HPs in general, in healthcare services, have something to learn from HPs in HLCs and their "MIspirit".…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Although this Viewpoint focused on physicians in the USA, we believe that the observations and suggestions outlined are applicable to a wide range of health-care professions globally. Implicit bias has been reported by many health-care professionals, such as nurses, 30 genetic counsellors, 31 and pharmacists. 32 Additionally, implicit bias training outside of the USA does not have a conceptual evidence-based framework 33,34 for the development of a curriculum that will drive changes in patient outcomes.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…68 This weight stigma leads to reduced quality of life as a result of discrimination in the workplace and health care services. 69,70 Ultimately as a result of policy makers failing to appropriately address the prevention and treatment of obesity due to this pervasive narrative, a massive rise in the associated costs has occurred. 71 5 | OBESITY, CHOICE, AND STIGMA As described above, hunger and satiety are phenomena we experience as conscious percepts generated via projections from subcortical brain centers, which have the ability to become dysregulated.…”
Section: Obesity As a Disease: The Physiological Response To Weight Lossmentioning
confidence: 99%