Abstract

BackgroundEducational attainment is a key social determinant of health. Health and education are linked by multiple pathways, many of which are not well understood. One such pathway is the association between being above a healthy weight and lower academic achievement. While various explanations have been put forward to explain this relationship, evidence for causal pathways is sparse and unclear. This study addresses that evidence gap.MethodsWe interviewed 19 adults (late 20s; 14 female, 5 male) and one young person (14 years, male) from the UK in 2019/2020. Participants were recruited from the ALSPAC 1990s birth cohort, sampled to ensure diversity in socio-economic status and educational attainment, and a community-based weight management group for young people. Interviews focused on experiences of being above a healthy weight during secondary school and how this may have affected their learning and achievement. Interviews were face-to-face, digitally recorded, and transcribed verbatim. We analysed the data thematically.ResultsWe identified key pathways through which higher body weight may negatively impact educational performance and showed how these are linked within a novel theoretical model. Because larger body size is highly stigmatised, participants engaged in different strategies to minimise their exposure to negative attention. Participants sought to increase their social acceptance or become less socially visible (or a combination of both). A minority navigated this successfully; they often had many friends (or the ‘right’ friends), experienced little or no bullying at school and weight appeared to have little effect on their achievement at school. For most however, the behaviours resulting from these strategies (e.g. disruptive behaviour, truanting, not working hard) or the physical, social or mental impacts of their school experiences (e.g. hungry, tired, self-conscious, depressed) made it difficult to concentrate and/or participate in class, which in turn affected how teachers viewed them.ConclusionsAction to combat weight stigma, both within schools and in wider society, is urgently required to help address these educational disparities that in turn can impact health in later life.

Highlights

  • The relationship between education and health is synergistic

  • Kenney et al [20] reported teachers felt students with obesity were more likely to struggle at school, with low self-esteem and weight-related bullying believed to reduce participation in class

  • A link between higher Body Mass Index (BMI) and lower academic attainment has been established in this cohort [28]. (Additional cohort details in supplementary material)

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Summary

Introduction

The relationship between education and health is synergistic. Educational attainment is a key social determinant of long-term health outcomes [1,2,3] and a predictor of adult obesity [4]. The pathways linking body size and academic achievement are likely to be highly complex and socially constructed. Most focused on the psychosocial impact of having a larger body size or their experience of treatment for their ‘condition’ (see [18]). Of those conducted within educational settings, just three examined how weight might affect educational performance. Health and education are linked by multiple pathways, many of which are not well understood. One such pathway is the association between being above a healthy weight and lower academic achievement.

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