Authors
Julia Temple Newhook, Deborah Gregory, Laurie Twells
Publication date
2015/6
Journal
Sociology of Health & Illness
Volume
37
Issue
5
Pages
653-667
Description
Over 80% of weight loss surgery (WLS) patients are women, yet gender is overwhelmingly absent in WLS research. This article discusses the findings of 54 interviews with twenty‐one women and six men waiting for WLS in Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. We critically examine the ways that gender shapes the meaning of WLS in these narratives. We explore gendered meanings in participants’ perspectives on their embodied experiences before surgery, social support as they decided to undergo the procedure, and their expectations for their lives after WLS. We draw on feminist theory to explain how these findings counter the dominant gender‐neutral medical model of obesity.
Total citations
20152016201720182019202020212022202320242448542721
Scholar articles
J Temple Newhook, D Gregory, L Twells - Sociology of Health & Illness, 2015