MedPath

The Exploration of an Active Training Tool to Reduce Weight Bias Among Students Pursuing a Healthcare-related Degree

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Obesity Bias
Interventions
Behavioral: A short-written document on obesity
Behavioral: An active training tool on weight bias and knowledge about obesity
Registration Number
NCT05482802
Lead Sponsor
Ariel University
Brief Summary

An open-label parallel RCT will be conducted among 220 students pursuing a health-related degree at Ariel university. The intervention tool will be based on the constructive social learning model and will include a short lecture on obesity, scenarios simulating a meeting between health professionals and patients with obesity that will be presented by professional role-players and include varying degrees of weight bias, stigma and discrimination, and an open discourse with a patient with obesity. The tool's development will be carried out throughout recommended steps including a comprehensive literature review, preparation of a preliminary draft of the plan, evaluation of the planned intervention tool in terms of content validity, and a pilot testing of the tool among n=15 students from the target population.

The control group will receive a short-written document on obesity. This study will utilize an embedded mixed-method approach. At baseline, one- and six- weeks post-intervention both groups will be asked to fill an anonymous online survey which will include demographics, weight and body perception, knowledge about obesity, the Anti-Fat Attitudes questionnaire, the Short-Form of Fat-Phobia scale, and the Weight-Implicit Association-Test. Moreover, in-depth interviews will be conducted among 15 participants from each group.

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
162
Inclusion Criteria
  • undergraduate students pursuing a healthcare-related degree including nutrition science, health systems management, communication disorders, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and nursing at Ariel university
  • age ≥18 years
  • willingness to participate in the study.
Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
A short-written document on obesityA short-written document on obesityA short-written document on obesity which will be based on current literature.
An active training tool on weight bias and knowledge about obesityAn active training tool on weight bias and knowledge about obesityThe intervention will take place at the university simulation center and include three components. First, a short-lecture on obesity and weight bias. Second, four scenarios that simulate meetings between health professionals and people with obesity which will be presented by professional role-players in sequence. Each scenario will include a different therapeutic situation and include varying degrees of weight bias, stigma, and discrimination to stimulate students to think and react. Third, an active open discourse with a person with obesity will be held.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Anti-Fat Attitudes questionnaire ('AFA')Change from baseline at six- weeks post-intervention

The 'AFA' indicates explicit anti-fat attitudes toward people with obesity and is composed of 13-items rated on a 10-point Likert scale and divided into three subscales ('dislike', 'fear about fat' and 'willpower'), with higher total scores indicating stronger anti-fat attitudes.

The short-form of fat-phobia scale (' F-scale')Change from baseline at six- weeks post-intervention

The 'F-scale' indicates fat-phobic attitudes toward people with obesity and is composed of 14-pairs of adjectives that are used to describe people with obesity (e.g., 'no willpower' vs. 'has willpower') and ranked on a 1-5 scale according to the point closest to the adjective name that describes their feelings and beliefs. Higher scores indicate stronger fat-phobic attitudes.

Weight Implicit Association Test ('IAT')Change from baseline at six- weeks post-intervention

IAT tool is an indirect measure of implicit bias toward weight which uses the constructs of "fat people" versus "thin people" and the polarized attitudes of "good" and "bad" to detect implicit weight bias.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Knowledge about obesityChange from baseline at six- weeks post-intervention

Knowledge about obesity will be assessed by five questions that were written by the research team according to current literature.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Ariel University

🇮🇱

Ariel, Israel

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath