Abstract
Cosmetic procedures are aimed at enhancing clients’ attractiveness by modifying their physical appearance. Women prefer cosmetic surgery more than men do, due to the ideal of leanness advertised by the media. Female adolescents, undergoing an emotionally unstable developmental stage, are particularly responsive to unrealistic beauty standards. The more they internalize cultural norms, the more they objectify their bodies. Young people’s views on their bodies are essentially influenced by the feedback received from their parents and other adults. The present study explored the impact of caregiver eating messages and objectified body consciousness on the acceptance of cosmetic surgery among Hungarian female students aged 14 to 19 years (M = 16.79, SD = 1.245). Self-report scales used to collect data in four secondary schools. The expected associations were tested with path analysis. Caregiver eating messages generally had an indirect positive impact on the acceptance of cosmetic surgery that was mediated by the shame component of objectified body consciousness. A direct impact was only shown by critical/restrictive caregiver messages and by the shame component of objectified body consciousness. The other two components of objectified body consciousness were unrelated to the acceptance of cosmetic surgery. In sum, caregiver messages on female adolescents’ appearance and eating habits have a formative role on their attitudes towards cosmetic surgery. Such messages predict their proneness to view their bodies as objects serving to meet certain beauty standards. The more they endorse such views, the more they are willing to consider cosmetic surgery to enhance their appearance.
Highlights
ObjectivesIn this study our aim was to explore the associations of Hungarian female secondary school students’ attitudes towards cosmetic surgery with the characteristics of the eating messages they received from their caregivers and with their self-objectification propensity
The present study explored the associations of female secondary school students’ attitudes towards cosmetic surgery with the characteristics of the eating messages they received from their caregivers and with their self-objectification propensity
The self-reported impact of critical/restrictive caregiver messages on acceptance of cosmetic surgery was mediated by body shame (H3)
Summary
In this study our aim was to explore the associations of Hungarian female secondary school students’ attitudes towards cosmetic surgery with the characteristics of the eating messages they received from their caregivers and with their self-objectification propensity
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