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Women Now More Accepting of Their Body Image, Karazsia鈥檚 Study Reveals

Bryan Karazsia

WOOSTER, Ohio 鈥 The social pressures women face in regards to appearance, specifically body image, may be lessening asserts聽, associate professor of psychology at 69直播 and lead author of 鈥淚s Body Dissatisfaction Changing Across Time? A Cross-Temporal Meta-Analysis,鈥 a study that generated national attention this summer as well as cautious optimism for parents of young daughters.

After analyzing data on body image and body dissatisfaction from surveys covering a 30-year period and 120,000-plus participants, Karazsia formally concluded that 鈥渢hese findings 鈥 offer evidence that sociocultural shifts in body acceptance and body diversity may be countering thinness-related pressures for girls and women.鈥
鈥淗ey, this is good news, this is great, maybe these pressures are going down,鈥 added Karazsia. 鈥淚 hope people see this and are inspired, both in research and how women think about their bodies and men, too.鈥
This good news comes in the face of body mass indexes rising and humans being physically larger than ever, admitted Karazsia, thus he warns eating disorders and the like are not going away. The statistics, though, do show a positive shift in people鈥檚 attitudes.
鈥淭he term body diversity can turn into body acceptance. Size, shape, and color isn鈥檛 health 鈥 health is health. You can be large and still be healthy,鈥 he explained. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 have to look like a Victoria鈥檚 Secret model to be healthy. In fact, if you do, you may be doing something wrong.鈥
Karazsia presented his findings at the American Psychological Association鈥檚 annual convention in August, and shortly after, he was receiving interview requests from the聽Los Angeles Times听补苍诲听Time聽among other media outlets. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been wild, it鈥檚 somewhat flattering, it鈥檚 humbling,鈥 said Karazsia about his new-found fame. 鈥淚鈥檝e studied this subject for about a decade and poured two years of my life into this project, and it鈥檚 a flash in the pan, then the story goes away. The story continues, though.鈥
In the聽L.A. Times聽piece, it was noted that聽Women鈥檚 Health聽magazine had decided to remove the all-too-familiar language seen in supermarket check-out lines and magazine racks across the nation, such as 鈥淚s your body bikini ready?鈥 While Karazsia does not think the results of his study are directly responsible, he is pleased.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a socio-cultural shift going on. A magazine making that decision to use careful terminology, whether it鈥檚 because of that shift or a response to their audience, either way it鈥檚 good,鈥 he said. 鈥淪ociety is saying don鈥檛 market (women) like that anymore. Some countries have banned models under a certain size.鈥
Karazsia credited the success of the study in part to students聽Zachary Mastarich 鈥17听补苍诲听Gina Williamson 鈥17, who poured through the data. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 do it alone, so the College鈥檚 sophomore research program was huge. Gina and Zach did graduate level organization and quality of work,鈥 he commented.
Karazsia鈥檚 work is not done by any means, as he wants to explore similar topics. 鈥淪omething we need to study more is the drive for leanness. We looked at muscularity and thinness, now is thinness going down because it鈥檚 being replaced by leanness? We haven鈥檛 studied it enough. Maybe in 20 years, we鈥檒l see how things changed again.鈥

Image: Associate professor of psychology Bryan Karazsia, with assistance from seniors Zachary Mastarich and Gina Williamson, analyzed 30 years of data and determined women are more accepting of their body image today, an exciting development that led to some national publicity this summer.

Posted in News on September 13, 2016.