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  1. Exercising Caution: A Case for Ethics Analysis in Physical Activity Promotion.Katelyn Esmonde - 2023 - Public Health Ethics 16 (1):77-85.
    Despite the important role of physical activity in population health and well-being, it has received less focus in public health ethics as compared to other modifiable lifestyle factors such as smoking and diet. However, when considering the current and potential role of physical activity within public health—including interventions and policies to encourage physical activity in schools and workplaces, changes to the built environment and the equity issues associated with access to physical activity—it is a ripe territory for ethical analysis. This (...)
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  • Bringing disgust in through the backdoor in healthy food promotion: a phenomenological perspective.Bas de Boer & Mailin Lemke - 2021 - Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy 24 (4):731-743.
    Obesity has been pointed out as one of the main current health risks leading to calls for a so-called “war on obesity”. As we show in this paper, activities that attempt to counter obesity by persuading people to adjust a specific behavior often employ a pedagogy of regret and disgust. Nowadays, however, public healthcare campaigns that aim to tackle obesity have often replaced or augmented the explicit negative depictions of obesity and/or excessive food intake with the positive promotion of healthy (...)
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  • A Matter of Justice: “Fat” Is Not Necessarily a Bad Word.Lauren Freeman - 2020 - Hastings Center Report 50 (5):11-16.
    This essay argues that the discrimination that fat patients face is an issue of health justice. Insofar as this is the case, bioethicists and health care providers should not only care about it but also work to dismantle the systematic, institutional, social, and individual factors that are contributing to it to ensure that fat patients receive high‐quality health care, free of stigma and discrimination. The essay discusses a variety of ways in which fat patients are discriminated against and considers the (...)
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  • Internalised Weight Stigma Moderates the Impact of a Stigmatising Prime on Eating in the Absence of Hunger in Higher- but Not Lower-Weight Individuals.Angela Meadows & Suzanne Higgs - 2019 - Frontiers in Psychology 10.
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