Investigating the attitudes of nurses who are obese
Jane Wills Professor of health promotion, School of Health and Social Care, London South Bank University, London, England
Muireann Kelly Research assistant, School of Health and Social Care, London South Bank University, London, England
Aim
To investigate the attitudes, motivations and behaviours of, and the uptake of workplace health initiatives by, nurses who are obese.
Method
Nurses who are or were obese and who practised in England were recruited at the Royal College of Nursing congress in Glasgow in June 2016. Participants were asked to complete a short survey on their attitudes to weight, and the effectiveness and availability of workplace health initiatives.
Results
A total of 196 nurses were surveyed, of which 95% (n = 186) wanted to lose weight and 94% (n = 185) thought that it was an issue for nurses to be obese, particularly because being obese made it challenging to discuss weight-loss and healthy lifestyles with patients. Participants expressed an interest in undertaking workplace health initiatives if these could be accommodated around their working hours and were free. However, 38% (n = 75) of participants reported that their workplace did not offer any such initiatives to improve staff health.
Conclusion
Obesity is often considered to be the result of an individual's lifestyle choices; however, nurses may experience environmental constraints in relation to their working practices that may affect their ability to lead healthy lifestyles. These factors should be addressed to reduce the high levels of obesity in the nursing workforce.
Nursing Standard.
doi: 10.7748/ns.2017.e10645
Correspondence
willsj@lsbu.ac.uk
Peer review
This article has been subject to external double-blind peer review and checked for plagiarism using automated software
Received: 03 August 2016
Accepted: 08 December 2016
Published online: 07 July 2017
Want to read more?
Already have access? Log in
or
3-month trial offer for £5.25/month
Subscribe today and save 50% on your first three months
RCNi Plus users have full access to the following benefits:
- Unlimited access to all 10 RCNi Journals
- RCNi Learning featuring over 175 modules to easily earn CPD time
- NMC-compliant RCNi Revalidation Portfolio to stay on track with your progress
- Personalised newsletters tailored to your interests
- A customisable dashboard with over 200 topics
Subscribe
Alternatively, you can purchase access to this article for the next seven days.
Buy now
Are you a student? Our student subscription has content especially for you.
Find out more