Title of article
Monitoring and normalising a lack of appetite and weight loss. A discursive analysis of an online support group for bariatric surgery
Author/Authors
Jo Cranwell، نويسنده , , Sarah Seymour-Smith، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Pages
9
From page
873
To page
881
Abstract
A significant adjustment in eating practices is required before and after bariatric surgery, yet we know relatively little about how patients manage these changes. In this paper, we explored how members of an online bariatric support group constructed their appetite and weight loss. Two hundred and eighty four online posts were collected, covering a period of just over a year, and analysed using discursive psychology. We found that a lack of appetite post-surgery was oriented to as something that was positively evaluated yet a cause for concern. Indeed, members monitored their food intake and marked out food consumption as a necessary activity in line with notions of healthy eating. Through monitoring members also normalised periods of weight stabilisation and were inducted into a group philosophy which encouraged a more holistic approach to post-surgery ‘success’. Our analysis also highlights how monitoring and policing work as social support mechanisms which help to maintain weight management. Thus we argue, in line with others, that weight management, typically depicted as an individual responsibility, is bound up with the social practices of the online support group. We suggest that clinical advice about a loss of appetite and periods of weight stabilisation post-surgery perhaps need further explanation to patients.
Keywords
Online support group , Bariatric surgery , Discourse , Monitoring appetite and weight
Journal title
Appetite
Serial Year
2012
Journal title
Appetite
Record number
956688
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