Obesogenic Behavior and Weight-Based Stigma in Popular Children’s Movies, 2012 to 2015

Author:

Howard Janna B.12,Skinner Asheley Cockrell234,Ravanbakht Sophie N.12,Brown Jane D.5,Perrin Andrew J.6,Steiner Michael J.7,Perrin Eliana M.12

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Pediatrics and

2. Duke Center for Childhood Obesity Research, School of Medicine, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina;

3. Medicine and

4. Duke Clinical Research Institute, Durham, North Carolina; and

5. School of Media and Journalism and

6. Departments of Sociology and

7. Pediatrics, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Obesity-promoting content and weight-stigmatizing messages are common in child-directed television programming and advertisements, and 1 study found similar trends in G- and PG-rated movies from 2006 to 2010. Our objective was to examine the prevalence of such content in more recent popular children’s movies. METHODS: Raters examined 31 top-grossing G- and PG-rated movies released from 2012 to 2015. For each 10-minute segment (N = 302) and for movies as units, raters documented the presence of eating-, activity-, and weight-related content observed on-screen. To assess interrater reliability, 10 movies (32%) were coded by more than 1 rater. RESULTS: The result of Cohen’s κ test of agreement among 3 raters was 0.65 for binary responses (good agreement). All 31 movies included obesity-promoting content; most common were unhealthy foods (87% of movies, 42% of segments), exaggerated portion sizes (71%, 29%), screen use (68%, 38%), and sugar-sweetened beverages (61%, 24%). Weight-based stigma, such as a verbal insult about body size or weight, was observed in 84% of movies and 30% of segments. CONCLUSIONS: Children’s movies include much obesogenic and weight-stigmatizing content. These messages are not shown in isolated incidences; rather, they often appear on-screen multiple times throughout the entire movie. Future research should explore these trends over time, and their effects.

Publisher

American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP)

Subject

Pediatrics, Perinatology, and Child Health

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1. Weight Bias and Stigma in Pediatric Obesity;Pediatric Clinics of North America;2024-08

2. Tackling obesity while preventing obesity stigma;Archives of Disease in Childhood;2024-04-08

3. Pediatric healthcare professionals' attitudes and beliefs about weight stigma: A descriptive study;Journal of Pediatric Nursing;2024-03

4. Obesogenic behaviour in school-age children: A cross-sectional study;The Journal of Palembang Nursing Studies;2023-12-31

5. Body weight representation in children's picturebooks;Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood;2023-11-27

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