Beyond Age, BMI, Gender Identity, and Gender Minority Stress, Weight Bias Internalization Is Uniquely Associated With More Eating and Body Image Disturbances and Poor Physical and Mental Health in Chinese Gender‐Diverse Adults

Author:

Barnhart Wesley R.12ORCID,Xiao Yueyang3ORCID,Li Yijing3ORCID,Gaggiano Christina1,Jiang Zexuan3ORCID,Wu Shijia3ORCID,Cao Hongjian4ORCID,He Jinbo3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology Bowling Green State University Bowling Green Ohio USA

2. Department of Psychiatry The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

3. Division of Applied Psychology, School of Humanities and Social Science The Chinese University of Hong Kong Shenzhen Guangdong China

4. Department of Psychology The University of Hong Kong Hong Kong SAR China

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectiveWeight bias internalization (WBI) is a robust, positive correlate of negative health outcomes; however, this evidence base primarily reflects cisgender individuals from Western cultural contexts. Gender‐diverse individuals from non‐Western cultural contexts (e.g., China) are at potentially high risk for WBI. Yet, no research has examined WBI and associated negative health consequences in this historically underrepresented population.MethodA cross‐sectional, online survey sampled Chinese gender‐diverse individuals (N = 410, Mage = 22.33 years). Variables were self‐reported, including demographics, WBI, body shame, body dissatisfaction, disordered eating, physical and mental health status, and gender minority stress (e.g., internalized cisgenderism). Analyses included correlations and multiple hierarchical regressions.ResultsPearson bivariate correlations demonstrated associations between higher WBI and more eating and body image disturbances and poor physical and mental health. After adjusting for age, BMI, gender identity, and gender minority stress, higher WBI was uniquely and positively associated with higher body shame, higher body dissatisfaction, higher disordered eating, and poor physical and mental health. Notably, WBI accounted for more unique variance in eating and body image disturbances (13%–25% explained by WBI) than physical and mental health (1%–4% explained by WBI).DiscussionWhile replication with longitudinal and experimental designs is needed to speak to the temporal dynamics and causality, our findings identify WBI as a unique, meaningful correlate of eating and body image disturbances in Chinese gender‐diverse adults.

Funder

Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality

Publisher

Wiley

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