Weight stigma is discrimination or stereotyping based on a person’s weight and size. It is a devastating and pervasive issue in maternity care, with extensive literature documenting the ‘shame and blame’ encountered by larger bodied women when interacting with healthcare professionals, resulting in medicalisation, depersonalisation of care, delayed healthcare seeking, and unacceptable maternity care experiences.Weight stigma is strongly associated with poor pregnancy outcomes,and undermines women’s capacity to engage in healthy nutrition and physical activity.

Body Positive Birth is a consumer-led program of research aiming to address weight stigma in maternity care. We are currently conducting several studies under the Body Positive Birth umbrella:

From preconception to breastfeeding: Co-Creating weightinclusive care with womenand healthcare providers: The RADIANT Study

Thank you to the women and maternity care providers who took part in the first phase of the RADIANT study. We are now analysing all of ideas and experiences people shared, with reports coming soon. In the next phase of the study, we’re developing Best Practice Principles for Weight Inclusive Maternity Care. If you’d like to be part of our national consensus building process, please click on the button below to find out more.

Co-creating Best Practice Principles for Weight Inclusive Maternity Care

 

 

Maternity care providers attitudes and beliefs towards weight and body size: A cross sectional survey [The MatCARES study]

Mat-CARES was a survey of midwives, obstetricians and general practitioners across Australia and New Zealand about their weight-stigma attitudes and beliefs. The survey has now been completed and we’ve started sharing the findings of this study – see ‘Spreading the word’ below.

 

Spreading the word

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