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Review
. 2022 Dec;23(12):e13511.
doi: 10.1111/obr.13511. Epub 2022 Oct 21.

Newspaper media framing of obesity during pregnancy in the UK: A review and framework synthesis

Affiliations
Review

Newspaper media framing of obesity during pregnancy in the UK: A review and framework synthesis

Nicola Heslehurst et al. Obes Rev. 2022 Dec.

Abstract

Two thirds of women report experiencing weight stigma during pregnancy. Newspaper media is powerful in framing health issues. This review synthesized UK newspaper media portrayal of maternal obesity. NexisUni was searched to identify newspaper articles, published January 2010 to May 2021, reporting content on obesity during pregnancy. Framework synthesis integrated quantitative and qualitative analysis of the content of articles. There were 442 articles included (59% tabloids and 41% broadsheets). Three overarching themes with interacting sub-themes were as follows: (1) Women were blamed for their weight, risks, and NHS impact. (2) Women were solely responsible for solving obesity, gendered from school age. (3) Women with obesity were a burden on individuals (e.g., themselves, their children, and health professionals), to society, and the NHS. Catastrophizing language framed the "problem," "scale," and "public health concern" of maternal obesity, emphasizing risk, and danger and was alarmist, aggressive, and violent as to elicit fear or devalue women. Articles platformed 'expert' voices rather than women's lived experiences. This review identified that UK newspaper media negatively frames and oversimplifies the topic of maternal obesity. Exposure to blaming and alarmist messaging could increase women's guilt, stigma, and internalized weight bias. The newspaper media should be harnessed to de-stigmatize maternal obesity and promote maternal well-being.

Keywords: media; obesity; pregnancy; stigma.

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Conflict of interest statement

The authors do not have any conflict of interest.

Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
Visual representation of themes. Legend: Blue boxes reflect the main themes, green boxes sub‐themes, and organe/red boxes the wider context. Gray text refers to catastrophizing language descriptors used throughout articles (this figure was created using biorender.com).

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