Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity

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Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity. / Ditlevsen, Kia.

I: Health Sociology Review, Bind 27, Nr. 3, 2018, s. 231-247.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Ditlevsen, K 2018, 'Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity', Health Sociology Review, bind 27, nr. 3, s. 231-247. https://doi.org/10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352

APA

Ditlevsen, K. (2018). Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity. Health Sociology Review, 27(3), 231-247. https://doi.org/10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352

Vancouver

Ditlevsen K. Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity. Health Sociology Review. 2018;27(3):231-247. https://doi.org/10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352

Author

Ditlevsen, Kia. / Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity. I: Health Sociology Review. 2018 ; Bind 27, Nr. 3. s. 231-247.

Bibtex

@article{5c2f6addbe0a446a835b72ad396c63c3,
title = "Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners{\textquoteright} approaches to interventions on childhood obesity",
abstract = "This qualitative study investigates health care practitioners{\textquoteright} approaches to early childhood obesity in Denmark and their view on their own ability to initiate processes of change in affected families, and it asks the overall question of whether perceived barriers become real through practitioners{\textquoteright} reluctance to intervene in families labelled as ´problematic{\textquoteright}. The paper identifies three approaches in the practitioners{\textquoteright} narratives: the socially oriented, the individually oriented, and the mixed. The individually oriented approach was based on a logic resembling individualistic explanatory models of behaviour change, and was related to a positive perspective on their own ability to move families towards healthier habits by health care practitioners. The socially oriented approach borrowed elements from a sociological perspective, which seemed to lead to resigned pessimism in the face of the complexity of the problem of childhood overweight and a reluctance to address early childhood overweight in some families. In practitioners of all three types, widespread cultural essentialism was found. Non-western, ethnic minority background was seen as determining family habits and making preventive action especially difficult. Based on this, the current paper discusses whether individual actions and choices are being ascribed too much explanatory power, and the health system's biased perceptions too little.",
keywords = "Health care practitioners, childhood obesity, cultural essentialism, ethnic minorities, inequality in health",
author = "Kia Ditlevsen",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352",
language = "English",
volume = "27",
pages = "231--247",
journal = "Health Sociology Review",
issn = "1446-1242",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Resignation, goal orientation or cultural essentialism? Health care practitioners’ approaches to interventions on childhood obesity

AU - Ditlevsen, Kia

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - This qualitative study investigates health care practitioners’ approaches to early childhood obesity in Denmark and their view on their own ability to initiate processes of change in affected families, and it asks the overall question of whether perceived barriers become real through practitioners’ reluctance to intervene in families labelled as ´problematic’. The paper identifies three approaches in the practitioners’ narratives: the socially oriented, the individually oriented, and the mixed. The individually oriented approach was based on a logic resembling individualistic explanatory models of behaviour change, and was related to a positive perspective on their own ability to move families towards healthier habits by health care practitioners. The socially oriented approach borrowed elements from a sociological perspective, which seemed to lead to resigned pessimism in the face of the complexity of the problem of childhood overweight and a reluctance to address early childhood overweight in some families. In practitioners of all three types, widespread cultural essentialism was found. Non-western, ethnic minority background was seen as determining family habits and making preventive action especially difficult. Based on this, the current paper discusses whether individual actions and choices are being ascribed too much explanatory power, and the health system's biased perceptions too little.

AB - This qualitative study investigates health care practitioners’ approaches to early childhood obesity in Denmark and their view on their own ability to initiate processes of change in affected families, and it asks the overall question of whether perceived barriers become real through practitioners’ reluctance to intervene in families labelled as ´problematic’. The paper identifies three approaches in the practitioners’ narratives: the socially oriented, the individually oriented, and the mixed. The individually oriented approach was based on a logic resembling individualistic explanatory models of behaviour change, and was related to a positive perspective on their own ability to move families towards healthier habits by health care practitioners. The socially oriented approach borrowed elements from a sociological perspective, which seemed to lead to resigned pessimism in the face of the complexity of the problem of childhood overweight and a reluctance to address early childhood overweight in some families. In practitioners of all three types, widespread cultural essentialism was found. Non-western, ethnic minority background was seen as determining family habits and making preventive action especially difficult. Based on this, the current paper discusses whether individual actions and choices are being ascribed too much explanatory power, and the health system's biased perceptions too little.

KW - Health care practitioners

KW - childhood obesity

KW - cultural essentialism

KW - ethnic minorities

KW - inequality in health

U2 - 10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352

DO - 10.1080/14461242.2018.1465352

M3 - Journal article

VL - 27

SP - 231

EP - 247

JO - Health Sociology Review

JF - Health Sociology Review

SN - 1446-1242

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 195473402