Examination of Gender Differences: Causal Attributions of Treatment-Seeking Individuals With Overweight and Obesity
Carmen Henning, Caroline Seiferth, Tanja Färber, Magdalena Pape, Stephan Herpertz, Sabine Steins-Loeber, Jörg Wolstein

TL;DR
This study found that men and women with overweight or obesity perceive different causes for their condition, with women emphasizing psychological factors like stress and emotional eating.
Contribution
The study identifies specific gender differences in causal attributions for overweight and obesity in a mobile health intervention context.
Findings
Women rated psychological causes, especially stress-related ones, significantly higher than men.
Men rated alcohol as a stronger cause of overweight/obesity compared to women.
Both genders primarily attributed their condition to behavioral factors.
Abstract
Addressing patients' perceptions of the causes of their overweight and obesity may be a promising approach to enhance treatment motivation and success. Previous research suggests that there are gender differences in these aspects. The objective of this study was to investigate gender differences in causal attributions among individuals with overweight and obesity who participated in a cognitive-behavioral mobile health (mHealth) intervention. Causal attributions were assessed using the revised Illness Perceptions Questionnaire, which included a rated and open answering section. An ANCOVA was conducted for each causal factor (behavioral, psychological, risk, external) as a dependent variable to determine gender differences, which were analysed with chi-squared tests for open-ended responses. The most frequently mentioned and highly rated cause was behavior for both genders (59.8% of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity and Health Practices · Obesity, Physical Activity, Diet · Eating Disorders and Behaviors
