Skip to content
Medical Health Aged Care

Monash Expert: Reducing weight stigma in healthcare

Monash University 2 mins read

Reducing weight stigma in healthcare is critical to supporting and improving the health of patients and decreasing the risk of adverse outcomes. Published in the Australian Journal of General Practice, a new paper, Supporting healthcare professionals to reduce weight stigma, aims to improve the situation.

A team of researchers from Monash University and other universities and organisations from The Obesity Collective* consulted with community members, healthcare professionals and policymakers to codesign guidance for reducing weight stigma in healthcare.

Their recommendations included targeting individual healthcare professionals and involving clear, practical guidelines and training that leverage the notions of ‘do no harm’, improving practice and recognising biases. They also found such strategies must be couched in broader structural approaches to weight stigma reduction.

Available to comment:

First author Dr Briony Hill, Deputy Head, Social Care Unit, School of Public Health and Preventive Medicine, Monash University
Contact details: +61 3 9903 4840 or [email protected]  

  • Health psychology
  • Weight gain in pregnancy
  • Weight stigma before, during and after pregnancy
  • Weight stigma generally

The following can be attributed to Dr Hill:

“Weight stigma is highly prevalent in healthcare settings such as general practice and is extremely harmful to patient wellbeing. While we know that most healthcare professionals do not intend to cause harm, they may be harbouring negative attitudes and biases towards their larger-bodied patients, potentially impacting the care they provide.

“The Obesity Collective*, Australia’s Peak body for obesity in Australia, conducted a co-design workshop to develop education to help healthcare professionals reduce weight stigma. Their work has generated key recommendations that all healthcare professionals can consider to end weight stigma.

“To reduce and ultimately end weight stigma in healthcare, approaches supporting both individual clinicians and the health system more broadly are needed. Healthcare professional training should focus on clear and practical guidelines that support them to ‘do no harm’, improve their practice, and recognise and address their own biases.

“Structural measures to eliminate weight stigma must address the physical environment, develop policies that support weight stigma reduction, and foster transdisciplinary action to optimise patient and health system solutions.”

*This paper was co-authored by members of The Obesity Collective Stigma Expert Group, including Dr Briony Hill, Associate Professor Xochitl de la Piedad Garcia, Dr Joanne Rathbone, Dr Zanab Malik, Dr Elizabeth Holmes-Truscott, Dr Blake Lawrence, Dr James Kite, Ms Kelly Cooper, Dr Timothy Broady, and Professor John Dixon.

For more Monash media stories visit our news & events site: monash.edu/news
For any other topics on which you may be seeking expert comment, contact the Monash University Media Unit on +61 3 9903 4840 or [email protected] 

More from this category

  • Government TAS, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/07/2025
  • 10:04
Heart Foundation

Heart of the Matter: Heart Foundation calls for vital election commitments for Tasmania

Heart of the Matter: Heart Foundation calls for vital election commitments for Tasmania Three key actions to improve Tasmanian heart health As the snap Tasmanian state election approaches, the Heart Foundation is calling for all parties and candidates to commit to three key actions to tackle the state’s biggest killer: heart disease. According to the Tasmanian Department of Health: 1,300 Tasmanians die each year from cardiovascular disease. In 2023, 8,850 people were hospitalised for heart related reasons. Tasmania has a 13% higher prevalence of heart disease than the national average. The Heart Foundation is calling for investment in three cost-effective…

  • Contains:
  • Agriculture Farming Rural, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 09/07/2025
  • 06:00
La Trobe University

Vet nurse burnout can affect pet care, but new study offers fix

Burnout among veterinary nurses can affect the quality of pet care, according to La Trobe University researchers. But a new international study published in Animals journalhas identified how to fix the issue. Burnout is widely known to affect veterinarians, yet few studies have looked at burnout among vet nurses, who make up 42 per cent of the industry workforce in Australia. Vet nurses play a critical role in pet healthcare, from monitoring anaesthesia, assisting in surgery and performing radiology to providing emotional support to pet parents. Lead researcher and PhD candidate, Angela Chapman said as pet ownership rises and demand…

  • Medical Health Aged Care, Science
  • 09/07/2025
  • 05:45
UNSW Sydney

COVID, flu & other nasties: what to expect this season and beyond

COVID and influenza are at peak circulation in winter, with several million peoplein Australia getting illfrom these respiratory viruses each year. In a post-pandemic world, many Australians now think of influenza as the more serious of the winter viruses –but Associate Professor Joel Rhee, Head of Discipline of General Practice at UNSW Sydney, says the national data tell a different story. “When I ask medical students, ‘what do you think is more serious – influenza or COVID-19?’ almost 100% say influenza,” says A/Prof. Rhee. “But the statistics say otherwise. COVID-19 is still causing more deaths than flu.” COVID’s most serious…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.