Desire or Disease? Framing Obesity to Influence Attributions of Responsibility and Policy Support.
Joseph McGlynnMatthew S McGlonePublished in: Health communication (2018)
The way we describe health threats affects perceptions of severity and preferred solutions to reduce risk. Most people agree obesity is a problem, but differ in how they attribute responsibility for development and decline of the disease. We explored effects of message framing on attributions of responsibility and support for public obesity policies using a 3 × 2 factorial design. Participants read one of six versions of a health message describing the negative effects of obesity. Message frames influenced respondent attributions and their support for policies to reduce obesity. Those who read a message that assigned agency to the disease (e.g., Obesity causes health problems) endorsed genetics as the cause to a greater degree than those who read a semantically equivalent message that instead assigned agency to people (e.g., Obese people develop health problems). In contrast, assigning agency to people rather than to the disease prompted higher attributions of individual responsibility and support for public policies. Explicit message frames that directly connected responsibility for obesity to either individual or societal factors had no effect on respondent perceptions. Findings suggest explicit arguments may be less effective in shifting perceptions of health threats than arguments embedded in agentic message frames. The results demonstrate specific message features that influence how people attribute responsibility for the onset and solution of obesity.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- weight loss
- public health
- insulin resistance
- metabolic syndrome
- mental health
- type diabetes
- high fat diet induced
- weight gain
- bariatric surgery
- primary care
- adipose tissue
- skeletal muscle
- body mass index
- risk assessment
- magnetic resonance imaging
- computed tomography
- health promotion
- human health
- drug induced
- obese patients