Determining associations among health orientation, fitness orientation, and attitudes toward fatness in physiotherapists and physiotherapy students using structural equation modeling

Document Type

Journal Article

Publication Title

Physiotherapy Canada

Publisher

University of Toronto Press

School

School of Nursing and Midwifery

RAS ID

62568

Comments

Webber, S. C., Thille, P., Liu, K., Wittmeier, K., & Cain, P. (2022). Determining associations among health orientation, fitness orientation, and attitudes toward fatness in physiotherapists and physiotherapy students using structural equation modeling. Physiotherapy Canada. Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.3138/ptc-2022-0038

Abstract

Purpose: Research suggests physiotherapists hold negative attitudes and beliefs toward fatness and fat people. Physiotherapists are also health-conscious, and invested in healthy lifestyle behaviours including physical activity. Our purpose was to describe relationships between health orientation, fitness orientation, and fat attitudes. Methods: Physiotherapists (n = 187) and physiotherapy students (n = 34) completed an on-line survey (Health Orientation Scale, Multidimensional Body-Self Relations Questionnaire, Fat Attitudes Assessment Toolkit). Structural equation modeling estimated associations between fat attitudes (dependent variable) and health and fitness orientation (independent variables). Results: Participants scored high in orientation toward fitness and health. We found strong positive associations between fitness orientation and health orientation (p < 0.001). Health orientation was not significantly associated with fat attitudes (p = 0.075), whereas increased age was associated with more positive fat attitudes (p < 0.01). Although most participants acknowledged that factors outside an individual’s control contribute to body weight, many also agreed with normative negative perspectives. Conclusions: Physiotherapists are highly oriented toward fitness and health. This may underlie beliefs in the controllability of body weight and contribute to negative attitudes toward fatness and fat people. Further research, with greater samples sizes is necessary to further investigate associations between health orientation and fat attitudes.

DOI

10.3138/ptc-2022-0038

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