Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-45l2p Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-27T10:54:47.579Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Body image as a global mental health concern

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 February 2023

Rachel F. Rodgers*
Affiliation:
APPEAR, Department of Applied Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA Department of Psychiatric Emergency & Acute Care, Lapeyronie Hospital, CHRU Montpellier, Montpellier, France
Katherine Laveway
Affiliation:
APPEAR, Department of Applied Psychology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Priscila Campos
Affiliation:
NICTA, Body Image and Eating Disorders Research Group, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Juiz de Fora, Brazil
Pedro Henrique Berbert de Carvalho
Affiliation:
NICTA, Body Image and Eating Disorders Research Group, Federal University of Juiz de Fora, Juiz de Fora, Brazil AMBULIM, Eating Disorders Program, Institute of Psychiatry, University of São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil
*
Author for correspondence: Rachel F. Rodgers, Email: r.rodgers@northeastern.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Body image concerns related to weight or other dimensions of appearance are now prevalent on a global scale. This paper reviews the theoretical frameworks that account for the global similarities and regional differences in rates and presentation of body image concerns, as well as reviewing the extant data. Given the harmful consequences of body image concerns in terms of mental and physical health, their global burden is high. Interventions to mitigate these concerns at the individual and systemic level are warranted.

Type
Review
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BYCreative Common License - NCCreative Common License - SA
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the same Creative Commons licence is used to distribute the re-used or adapted article and the original article is properly cited. The written permission of Cambridge University Press must be obtained prior to any commercial use.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press

Impact statement

Body image concerns include preoccupation and dissatisfaction with the body’s appearance including its shape and weight as well as other characteristics. Body image concerns are present across the globe due to strong pressures to pursue appearance ideals. Although these concerns may vary with cultural context, their prevalence and association with poor mental and physical health are global. Given these high rates and the negative effects of body image concerns, it is important to increase our efforts to prevent and decrease them across the globe.

Introduction

Body image is a multidimensional construct encompassing the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of an individual related to their own appearance (Cash, Reference Cash2004). Body image is often conceptualized as including both an evaluative aspect (satisfaction or concern with appearance) and an evaluation of the centrality of body image to an individual’s identity (Jarry et al., Reference Jarry, Dignard and O’Driscoll2019). Historically, much of the empirical research has focused on body image from a deficit lens, in particular as a risk factor for poor mental health and psychopathology including eating disorders and other mental health concerns. In addition, this work has been helpful in highlighting body image concerns as a mental health concern in its own right. Nevertheless, more recently increasing attention has been focused on body image through a positive psychology lens (Tylka and Wood-Barcalow, Reference Tylka and Wood-Barcalow2015) and the ways in which positive body image can be related to well-being. As part of this focus on positive body image, more attention has been paid to nonappearance dimensions of body image such as functionality and embodiment (Piran, Reference Piran2019; Alleva and Tylka, Reference Alleva and Tylka2021).

Much of the early literature in the area of body image, up until the new millennium, stemmed from English-speaking high-income countries. In recent years, this literature has been expanded to include work from a range of countries and geographic regions. The aim of this review is to offer a critical synthesis of the literature that exists on body image at a global level. First, prevailing theoretical frameworks that have guided this work will be reviewed. Second, the existing data regarding body image at a global level will be summarized. Finally, implications and future directions will be offered.

Theoretical overview

Several theories have been developed to usefully guide investigations into body image. These frameworks place important emphasis on the role of elements at different levels, ranging from theories focusing on macro-level elements such as social discourse and institution, and those centered on the role of individual-level factors. Here, dominant theories are presented in order of narrowing lens, from the macro- to individual level.

Body capital

The acceleration of highly visual culture, facilitated by digital technologies in recent years, has exacerbated the extent to which the body’s appearance is a central source of capital for individuals worldwide (Bourdieu, Reference Bourdieu2018). Body capital consists of two distinct dimensions: (1) the amount of body capital held by an individual and (2) the extent to which individuals are encouraged to invest in their body as a source of capital. Both of these dimensions are related to the matrices of power and privilege that underpin the majority of contemporary societies in which certain bodies hold more social power than others. Thus, a body that is read as holding certain identities and that is closer to social beauty standards will hold more body capital. Conversely, individuals whose identities afford them lower power and privilege, such as Black and Indigenous People of Color, and those who live in larger bodies, are more strongly encouraged to invest in their appearance as a source of capital. This perspective is relevant when considering who within a certain group is thus more likely to experience their body as related to their experiences of oppression, while concurrently experiencing it as a modifiable source of potential capital (Edmonds, Reference Edmonds2007; Hunter, Reference Hunter2011).

Sociocultural theories

Sociocultural theories highlight how messages from broad social discourses, relayed by proximal sociocultural agents (such as the media or the interpersonal environment), influence individuals’ beliefs regarding appearance and thereby their body image. Thus, for example, social discourses regarding the moral value of pursuing an appearance that conforms to external standards, including in terms of weight, and that encourages individuals to discipline and self-monitor their bodies have been useful (Thompson et al., Reference Thompson, Heinberg, Altabe and Tantleff-Dunn1999; Fitzsimmons-Craft, Reference Fitzsimmons-Craft2011). In addition, these theories have made important contributions in highlighting the increasing demands placed on individuals in terms of appearance standards, the unrealistic nature of beauty ideals, as well as their progressive globalization (Widdows, Reference Widdows2018). While it is true that appearance ideals vary across cultures, as well as social identities including gender and sexual orientation, it is also the case that a globalized ideal that is slender, toned yet curvy for women and muscular and lean for men, and golden in skin tone is emerging (Widdows, Reference Widdows2018). These theories also highlight how these socially constructed appearance standards serve political and economic goals as their inherent unattainability generates large financial profits as individuals strive to pursue them, while their perpetuation of oppressive social hierarchies contributes to maintaining the existing systems of power and privilege (Hesse-Biber et al., Reference Hesse-Biber, Leavy, Quinn and Zoino2006; Rodgers, 2022 as cited in Aimé, Reference Aimé, Dion and Maïano2022). Empirical work grounded in these theories has been useful in identifying mechanisms through which sociocultural discourses and appearance ideals are internalized by individuals, and the role of appearance comparison in the development and maintenance of body image concerns (Shroff and Thompson, Reference Shroff and Thompson2006; Rodgers et al., Reference Rodgers, Chabrol and Paxton2011; Schaefer et al., Reference Schaefer, Burke, Anderson, Thompson, Heinberg, Bardone-Cone, MKH, Frederick, Anderson, Schaumberg, Nerini, Stefanile, Dittmar, Klump, Vercellone and Paxton2019).

Related to the idea of body capital, Westernization, urbanization, and rapid economic growth have been posited to be linked to increased body image concerns through intensifying media and advertising pressures, as well as competition for resources and social mobility (Becker, Reference Becker2004; McLaren and Kuh, Reference McLaren and Kuh2004; Gorrell et al., Reference Gorrell, Trainor and Le Grange2019). From this perspective, countries that are most affluent, as well as those that are undergoing the most rapid cultural and economic transitions, are likely to be those where the highest rates of body image concerns are found.

Critical feminist theories

Critical feminist theories have been useful in identifying how gendered processes that serve economic and political goals of gender majorities, including the objectification of women and gender minorities, are related to body image (Peterson et al., Reference Peterson, Grippo and Tantleff-Dunn2008; Roberts et al., Reference Roberts, Calogero, Gervais, Travis, White, Rutherford, Williams, Cook and Wyche2018). These theories emphasize how the gendered nature of body ideals and the social value attributed to appearance serve to further protect existing gender hierarchies. Thus, for example, socializing women to be invested in achieving an unrealistically slender and highly groomed appearance diverts energies and resources away from other (political and social) activities and continues to perpetuate systems in which women’s social worth is indexed to their appearance (Widdows, Reference Widdows2018; Piran, Reference Piran2019). In addition, these theories have highlighted how the objectification of women in society, in particular through media images, leads to women internalizing the need to self-monitor one’s body, in the form of self-surveillance and self-objectification, and how these factors are also associated with poor body image (Fitzsimmons-Craft, Reference Fitzsimmons-Craft2011).

Minority stress theories

A third important group of theories has highlighted how individuals who hold minoritized identities may experience and fear appearance-based discrimination (Brewster et al., Reference Brewster, Sandil, DeBlaere, Breslow and Eklund2017; Veldhuis et al., Reference Veldhuis, Te Poel, Pepping, Konijn and Spekman2017; Brewster et al., Reference Brewster, Velez, Breslow and Geiger2019). These experiences and the associated anxiety lead to negative affect, a recognized risk factor for body image concerns, as well as heightened preoccupation with appearance. In addition, individuals may engage in efforts to avoid discrimination and the associated anxiety by attempting to modify their appearance through behaviors that may be harmful in the long term, as well as avoiding situations in ways that may be impairing over time.

A comprehensive integrative model of minority stress and sociocultural theory was useful to better understand how minority stressors (heterosexist discrimination, sexual orientation concealment, and internalized homophobia) were related to sociocultural influences (sociocultural pressures, thin ideal, and muscular-ideal internalization) and body image concerns and related body change behaviors (Convertino et al., Reference Convertino, Helm, Pennesi, Gonzales and Blashill2021).

Empirical evidence across countries

High-income English-speaking countries

The large majority of the available research has stemmed from high-income English-speaking countries such as the USA, Canada, the UK, and Australia (Holmqvist and Frisén, Reference Holmqvist and Frisén2010). In such cultural contexts, strong adherence to unrealistically slender and muscular ideals is overall found, with little variation across high socioeconomic status sites (Swami et al., Reference Swami, Frederick, Aavik, Alcalay, Allik, Anderson, Andrianto, Arora, Brännström and Cunningham2010). In such contexts, body image concerns are highly prevalent and tend to be greatest among individuals with minoritized identities including women, sexual and gender minorities, individuals living in larger bodies, and those from minoritized racial and ethnic backgrounds (Frederick et al., Reference Frederick, Crerand, Brown, Perez, Best, Cook-Cottone, Compte, Convertino, Gordon, Malcarne, Nagata, Parent, Pennesi, Pila, Rodgers, Schaefer, Thompson, Tylka and Murray2022). Appearance ideals that are gendered, heteronormative, ableist, ageist, and Eurocentric contribute to centering concerns around weight, muscularity, youth, fairness, and related characteristics across groups.

Research has suggested that levels of body image concerns in high-income English-speaking countries, particularly in the USA, are among the highest globally, with the exception of pockets of very affluent and Westernized areas, such as within Asia (Holmqvist and Frisén, Reference Holmqvist and Frisén2010). It is also within such contexts that research focusing on positive body image has received the greatest attention (Halliwell, Reference Halliwell2015), as well as research aiming to refine explanatory models of body image concerns that account for interindividual variations (Pachankis et al., Reference Pachankis, Clark, Burton, Hughto, Bränström and Keene2020).

In the USA and in other English-speaking high-income countries, negative body image has been associated with eating disorders (Drummond, Reference Drummond2002; McLean and Paxton, Reference McLean and Paxton2019), as well as depression and postpartum depression (Brausch and Gutierrez, Reference Brausch and Gutierrez2009; Silveira et al., Reference Silveira, Ertel, Dole and Chasan-Taber2015), and poor psychosocial functioning (Davison and McCabe, Reference Davison and McCabe2006). Effective interventions to decrease body image concerns have been developed, in particular those that increase understandings of the socially constructed nature of appearance ideals and decrease adherence to them (Marchand et al., Reference Marchand, Stice, Rohde and Becker2011; Lewis-Smith et al., Reference Lewis-Smith, Diedrichs and Halliwell2019). Notably, sometimes these interventions address eating disorders as the main outcome and body image as a risk factor (Marchand et al., Reference Marchand, Stice, Rohde and Becker2011). However, these interventions need to be embedded more systematically into existing networks and systems, and efforts to decrease universal risk need to be increased (Bell et al., Reference Bell, Rodgers and Paxton2016).

European countries

Studies in European non-English-speaking countries have overall evidenced findings that are similar to those in high-income English-speaking countries, although overall rates of body image concerns tend to be lower than in the USA (Frederick et al., Reference Frederick, Buchanan, Sadehgi-Azar, Peplau, Haselton, Berezovskaya and Lipinski2007; Holmqvist and Frisén, Reference Holmqvist and Frisén2010). Within Europe, variations exist in terms of body image, for example, individuals from Belgium and Portugal have reported lower rates of body size satisfaction as compared to Norway and Denmark (Kvalem et al., Reference Kvalem, Graham, Hald, Carvalheira, Janssen and Štulhofer2020).

Latin countries such as Portugal and Spain tend to place more emphasis on appearance, which is accompanied by higher rates of cosmetic surgery and body image concerns (Stefanile et al., Reference Stefanile, Matera, Nerini and Pasciucco2015). Consistent with the theories described previously, high rates of appearance investment and anxiety in Cyprus, as compared to other European countries, were interpreted as being related to the lower economic power of the area and recent rapid urbanization and change (Koutsantoni et al., Reference Koutsantoni, Kkeli and Argyrides2020).

Among European samples, body image has been found to be associated with mental health concerns including internalizing symptoms (Ramos et al., Reference Ramos, Moreno-Maldonado, Moreno and Rivera2019), eating disorder symptoms (Rodgers et al., Reference Rodgers, Chabrol and Paxton2011), and poor psychological functioning (Corry et al., Reference Corry, Pruzinsky and Rumsey2009; Træen et al., Reference Træen, Markovic and Kvalem2016). Given the preliminary evidence for the burden of body image concerns in Europe, continuing to develop efforts toward prevention is critical (Barbosa, Reference Barbosa2021).

Latin America

Body image disturbances and physical appearance concerns are prevalent in most Latin American countries (McArthur et al., Reference McArthur, Holbert and Pena2005; Silva et al., Reference Silva, Nahas, de Sousa, Del Duca and Peres2011; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Jung, Vaamonde, Omar, Paris and Formiga2012; Amaral and Ferreira, Reference Amaral and Ferreira2017; Swami et al., Reference Swami, Tran, Barron, Afhami, Aimé, Almenara, Dal and Amaral2020: Bolívar-Suárez et al., Reference Bolívar-Suárez, Gómez, Yanez-Peñúñuri, Anacona and Gómez2021; León-Paucar et al., Reference León-Paucar, Calderón-Olivos, Calizaya-Milla and Saintila2021). Research points to several sociocultural factors related to body image concerns in Latin American samples, such as pressure to achieve socially prescribed body ideals and the internalization of appearance ideals (Austin and Smith, Reference Austin and Smith2008; Mellor et al., Reference Mellor, McCabe, Ricciardelli and Merino2008; Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Jung, Vaamonde, Omar, Paris and Formiga2012; de Carvalho et al., Reference de Carvalho, Alvarenga and Ferreira2017; de Carvalho and Ferreira, Reference de Carvalho and Ferreira2020), unique pressures to meet unrealistic standards of beauty (Forbes et al., Reference Forbes, Jung, Vaamonde, Omar, Paris and Formiga2012; Gruber et al., Reference Gruber, Kalkbrenner and Hitter2022), thin-ideal awareness (Moreno-Domínguez et al., Reference Moreno-Domínguez, Rutsztein, Geist, Pomichter and Cepeda-Benito2019), negative appearance-related messages from family members (Rivero et al., Reference Rivero, Killoren, Kline and Campione-Barr2022), acculturative stress (Quiñones et al., Reference Quiñones, Herbozo and Haedt-Matt2022), and acculturation (Marquez and Benitez, Reference Marquez and Benitez2021).

It is noteworthy that poor mental health has been associated with body image concerns in Latin American countries, including low self-esteem (Amaral and Ferreira, Reference Amaral and Ferreira2017; Bolívar-Suárez et al., Reference Bolívar-Suárez, Gómez, Yanez-Peñúñuri, Anacona and Gómez2021), depressive symptoms (Amaral and Ferreira, Reference Amaral and Ferreira2017; Delgado-Floody et al., Reference Delgado-Floody, Guzmán-Guzmán, Caamaño-Navarrete, Jerez-Mayorga, Zulic-Agramunt and Cofré-Lizama2021; León-Paucar et al., Reference León-Paucar, Calderón-Olivos, Calizaya-Milla and Saintila2021), poor psychological well-being (Amaral and Ferreira, Reference Amaral and Ferreira2017; Lemes et al., Reference Lemes, Câmara, Alves and Aerts2018; Matias et al., Reference Matias, Silva, Duca, Bertuol, Lopes and Nahas2020), mental health concerns (Pinheiro et al., Reference Pinheiro, Horta, Pinheiro, Horta, Terres and Silva2007; Silva et al., Reference Silva, Nahas, de Sousa, Del Duca and Peres2011), and eating disorder symptoms (Compte et al., Reference Compte, Sepulveda and Torrente2015; Amaral and Ferreira, Reference Amaral and Ferreira2017; de Carvalho et al., Reference de Carvalho, Alvarenga and Ferreira2017; de Carvalho and Ferreira, Reference de Carvalho and Ferreira2020). Although effective interventions to decrease body image concerns have been developed for Latin Americans (Castillo et al., Reference Castillo, Solano and Sepúlveda2019; Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Brown, Campos, Amaral and de Carvalho2021; Rutsztein et al., Reference Rutsztein, Murawski, Leonardelli, Scappatura, Elizathe, Custodio and Keegan2021; Resende et al., Reference Resende, Almeida, dos Santos Alvarenga, Brown and de Carvalho2022), there is still a critical need to position body image as a priority in public mental health policies, and again several of these programs address body image as a risk factor within eating disorder prevention. This may be particularly challenging in Latin America countries, given difficulties faced in their operationalization, financing, and adaptation to sociocultural realities (Leiva-Peña et al., Reference Leiva-Peña, Rubí-González and Vicente-Parada2021).

Asia and South-East Asia

Beauty ideals in Asia and South-East Asia have been described as centering around being small-bodied as well as a particular emphasis on facial features (Mellor et al., Reference Mellor, Waterhouse, Bt Mamat, Xu, Cochrane, Mccabe and Ricciardelli2013) and skin tone (Prusaczyk and Choma, Reference Prusaczyk and Choma2018). Asia is a very diverse area in terms of affluence and cultural groups, and unsurprisingly, these differences have been found to be associated with variations in body image concerns. Thus, for example, in highly Westernized and affluent parts of Asia, levels of body image concerns are among the highest in the world (e.g. Shih and Kubo, Reference Shih and Kubo2005; Jung et al., Reference Jung, Forbes and Lee2009).

As in other cultures, support has been found for the role of media influence in body image across Asian countries including in Singapore (Chang et al., Reference Chang, Li, Loh and Chua2019), Taiwan (Chang et al., Reference Chang, Lee, Chen, Chiu, Pan and Huang2013), Korea (You and Shin, Reference You and Shin2020), Hong Kong and China (Rochelle and Hu, Reference Rochelle and Hu2017), and Japan (Ando et al., Reference Ando, Giorgianni, Danthinne and Rodgers2021), as well as the role of the internalization of appearance ideals (Omori et al., Reference Omori, Yamazaki, Aizawa and de Zoysa2017; Hsu et al., Reference Hsu, Hung and Antoine2021). In addition, work has been accumulating from a positive body image perspective, suggesting that these constructs are relevant to these groups (Swami and Jaafar, Reference Swami and Jaafar2012; Todd and Swami, Reference Todd and Swami2020).

As documented in other cultural contexts, in Asian countries body image concerns have been associated with eating disorder symptoms (Yamamiya et al., Reference Yamamiya, Shroff and Thompson2008; Chisuwa and O’Dea, Reference Chisuwa and O’Dea2010; Kaewpradub et al., Reference Kaewpradub, Kiatrungrit, Hongsanguansri and Pavasuthipaisit2017), depression (Prusaczyk and Choma, Reference Prusaczyk and Choma2018), and poorer quality of life (Santhira Shagar et al., Reference Santhira Shagar, Donovan, Boddy, Tapp and Harris2021). In very recent years, prevention efforts have been extended to affluent and developing areas of Asia (Craddock et al., Reference Craddock, Garbett, Haywood, Nasution, White, Saraswati, Rizkiah, Medise and Diedrichs2021; Danthinne et al., Reference Danthinne, Giorgianni, Ando and Rodgers2022; Garbett et al., Reference Garbett, Craddock, Haywood, Nasution, White, Saraswati, Medise, Diedrichs and Williamson2022); however, more work is needed.

The Middle East

Body image concerns are present in the Middle East; however, much of the existing work has focused on women, with rare exceptions (Melki et al., Reference Melki, Hitti, Oghia and Mufarrij2015; Saghir and Hyland, Reference Saghir and Hyland2017). A study among women from Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Oman, and Syria revealed that in each country 32–39% of women reported being dissatisfied with their body weight, and 17–22% reported a preference for the body shape of Western models (Musaiger, Reference Musaiger2015). In another study among women from southwestern Saudi Arabia, 77% indicated a discrepancy between their actual, perceived, and ideal weights (Khalaf et al., Reference Khalaf, Westergren, Berggren, Ekblom and Al-Hazzaa2015).

Similar to findings in other settings, urbanization has been associated with a preference for thinness (Jackson et al., Reference Jackson, Rashed and Saad-Eldin2003), and research has pointed to the role of sociocultural factors in body image concerns, including the role of media (Tayyem et al., Reference Tayyem, Bawadi, AbuMweis, Allehdan, Agraib, Ghazzawi, Al-Mannai and Musaiger2016; Saghir and Hyland, Reference Saghir and Hyland2017) and the internalization of appearance ideals (Melki et al., Reference Melki, Hitti, Oghia and Mufarrij2015; Zainal et al., Reference Zainal, Stevens, Harriger and Herbozo2020). Perhaps in this geographic area more than others, the role of cultural and religious values and behaviors has been explored, with findings suggesting that the relationships are complex and require further disentangling (Al-Mutawa et al., Reference Al-Mutawa, Schuilenberg, Justine and Taher2019; Sidi et al., Reference Sidi, Geller, Abu Sinni, Levy and Handelzalts2020).

Again, as in other contexts, body image concerns have been associated with eating disorder symptoms in students from Iran (Naeimi et al., Reference Naeimi, Haghighian, Gargari, Alizadeh and Rouzitalab2016) and with depression among students in Turkey (Tayfur and Evrensel, Reference Tayfur and Evrensel2020). These findings suggest that here too, body image may be accompanied by significant mental health burden, and that tailoring and extending prevention efforts to these settings would be important.

Africa

While specific appearance ideals and body image concerns vary across contexts throughout Sub-Saharan Africa, traditional standards of beauty for women often reflect a preference for a larger body size and a fuller, curvier shape (Furnham and Baguma, Reference Furnham and Baguma1994; Tovée et al., Reference Tovée, Swami, Furnham and Mangalparsad2006; Naigaga et al., Reference Naigaga, Jahanlu, Claudius, Gjerlaug, Barikmo and Henjum2018). These traditional standards of attractiveness and beauty continue to exert influence on body image ideals today, with women and men at higher weights endorsing greater appearance satisfaction than those at lower weights (Otakpor and Ehimigbai, Reference Otakpor and Ehimigbai2016; Tuoyire et al., Reference Tuoyire, Kumi-Kyereme, Doku and Amo-Adjei2018).

Consistent with this, cross-cultural work has supported that body image satisfaction, including as related to weight and muscularity, is higher among groups from African countries as compared to similarly aged groups from countries such as China, Indonesia, and Ecuador (Blum et al., Reference Blum, Li, Choiriyyah, Barnette, Michielson and Mmari2021), and the UK (Thornborrow et al., Reference Thornborrow, Onwuegbusi, Mohamed, Boothroyd and Tovée2020).

However, globalization has brought increasing pressures to achieve Eurocentric beauty ideals and a greater desire for smaller hips, larger buttocks, straight hair, lighter skin tones, and slimmer noses among African women (Balogun-Mwangi et al., Reference Balogun-Mwangi, Robinson-Wood, DeTore, Edwards George, Rodgers and Sanchezunder review; Eddy et al., Reference Eddy, Hennessey and Thompson-Brenner2007; Kaziga et al., Reference Kaziga, Muchunguzi, Achen and Kools2021). Consistent with theories regarding the role of accelerating modernity, among women in South Africa, Cameroon, and Uganda, higher levels of desire for thinness and preference for smaller bodies have developed (Dapi et al., Reference Dapi, Omoloko, Janlert, Dahlgren and Håglin2007; Prioreschi et al., Reference Prioreschi, Wrottesley, Cohen, Reddy, Said-Mohamed, Twine, Tollman, Kahn, Dunger and Norris2017; Kaziga et al., Reference Kaziga, Muchunguzi, Achen and Kools2021), as well as a preference for Eurocentric beauty ideals among women from Nigeria versus Kenya (Balogun-Mwangi et al., Reference Balogun-Mwangi, Robinson-Wood, DeTore, Edwards George, Rodgers and Sanchezunder review). Thus, appearance ideals may be changing in African countries and pressures to pursue mainstream globalized appearances may be increasing.

As predicted by sociocultural theories, these pressures, including pressures from social media, which represents a principal source of globalized appearance pressures, have been found to be associated with body size dissatisfaction (Michels and Amenyah, Reference Michels and Amenyah2017), desire for a thinner body (Terhoeven et al., Reference Terhoeven, Nikendei, Bärnighausen, Bountogo, Friederich, Ouermi, Sié and Harling2020), and poorer overall body image (Kaziga et al., Reference Kaziga, Muchunguzi, Achen and Kools2021) in Ghana, Burkina Faso, and Uganda, respectively. Although multiple factors may be at play, increased exposure to Western (but not Zimbabwean) media was found to account for poorer body image among Zimbabwean women (Swami et al., Reference Swami, Mada and Tovée2012). The literature pertaining to body image among men in Africa is more scarce. Nevertheless, emerging research has suggested that while dissatisfaction with muscularity may be present in men, rates are lower than in other cultural contexts such as the USA (Frederick et al., Reference Frederick, Buchanan, Sadehgi-Azar, Peplau, Haselton, Berezovskaya and Lipinski2007).

Consistent with findings from around the globe, in Africa greater body image concerns have been associated with poorer mental health outcomes, including eating disorders (Prioreschi et al., Reference Prioreschi, Wrottesley, Cohen, Reddy, Said-Mohamed, Twine, Tollman, Kahn, Dunger and Norris2017; Terhoeven et al., Reference Terhoeven, Nikendei, Bärnighausen, Bountogo, Friederich, Ouermi, Sié and Harling2020), depression and anxiety (Corona et al., Reference Corona, Hood and Haffejee2019), lower quality of life (Ejike, Reference Ejike2015), and general psychiatric morbidity (Otakpor and Ehimigbai, Reference Otakpor and Ehimigbai2016). Again, efforts to prevent this burden would be important.

Global commonalities

Although differences exist, the literature has also highlighted commonalities across countries at the global level in terms of appearance ideals (Lipinski and Pope, Reference Lipinski and Pope2002; Swami et al., Reference Swami, Frederick, Aavik, Alcalay, Allik, Anderson, Andrianto, Arora, Brännström and Cunningham2010), the nature of body image concerns, and potential risk factors in the development of these concerns. Support has been found for media exposure, and particularly Westernized media exposure, as a correlate of poorer body image among adults across 26 countries in 10 world regions (Swami et al., Reference Swami, Frederick, Aavik, Alcalay, Allik, Anderson, Andrianto, Arora, Brännström and Cunningham2010; Schaefer et al., Reference Schaefer, Burke, Anderson, Thompson, Heinberg, Bardone-Cone, MKH, Frederick, Anderson, Schaumberg, Nerini, Stefanile, Dittmar, Klump, Vercellone and Paxton2019). Similarly, among adolescents from 24 countries across Europe, Canada, and the USA, the role of parental influence in body image has been supported (Al Sabbah et al., Reference Al Sabbah, Vereecken, Elgar, Nansel, Aasvee, Abdeen, Ojala, Ahluwalia and Maes2009). These findings provide strong support for continuing to ground work in sociocultural models that account for these pathways.

In addition, the literature has supported the fact that immigration from a lower income and less Westernized area to a higher income, urban, and Westernized area is frequently accompanied by increased body image concerns (Toselli et al., Reference Toselli, Rinaldo and Gualdi-Russo2016). This increase may be related to greater exposure to Western media, as well as increased minority stress, and a loss of capital that may lead to body capital becoming more salient.

Importantly, the consistent findings regarding the association between body image and multiple indicators of poor mental health including eating disorders, mood disorders, and general impaired functioning highlight the critical nature of body image concerns. Coordinated efforts should be made to address this global issue.

Theoretical and practical implications

Theoretical implications

Predominant theories that have been useful for conceptualizing body image concerns include those that highlight the importance of sociocultural identities, particularly from an intersectional and minority stress standpoint. The majority of the work that has been conducted outside of high-income Western countries has focused on sociocultural elements including pressures toward thinness and internalization of media ideals (e.g. Moreno-Domínguez et al., Reference Moreno-Domínguez, Rutsztein, Geist, Pomichter and Cepeda-Benito2019; Zainal et al., Reference Zainal, Stevens, Harriger and Herbozo2020; Hsu et al., Reference Hsu, Hung and Antoine2021). This represents an important gap, as theories that can account for the ways in which appearance is tied to power and privilege are likely particularly useful ones in such contexts. Future work at the global level should seek to explore these facets to a greater extent. It is notable, however, that the work grounded in sociocultural theories suggested that these frameworks and their related constructs are still applicable outside of affluent Western contexts. Together, these findings suggest that additional attention should be focused on extending theories to be culturally informed and sensitive to cultural variations as well as integrating important elements of minority and intersectionality theory.

Practice implications

From a practice perspective, findings highlight three important elements. First, the prevalence of body image concerns worldwide is high. Second, these concerns are robustly linked to mental health concerns. Third, prevention efforts are limited by their failure to be embedded in existing structures (e.g. school curriculum, etc.) and by the fact that some of the programs that have received the greatest research attention target body image in the context of eating disorder prevention. Together, these three elements point to an urgent need to elevate the seriousness of appearance concerns at a global level and to continue efforts to develop universal and targeted interventions with a broad reach that can be easily disseminated, for example through embedding them in existing services for youth or by leveraging the reach of digital technologies. These efforts should build on additional work extending theoretical frameworks that can identify cross-cultural core intervention targets (such as internalization of appearance ideals) as well as culturally specific ones.

Future directions

Although initially constricted to high-income English-speaking countries, the empirical literature focused on body image has started to extend to a global level, making important contributions to our knowledge of the global burden of body image concerns. Despite these contributions, several areas of future research emerge.

Extending to more diverse groups

Replicating the ways in which the body image literature developed within the field, the majority of the extant literature from areas such as Africa or the Middle East has to date largely focused on women and thinness-related concerns. Moving forward, it will be important to extend this work to more diverse groups in terms of gender, sexual orientation, age, and ability. Moreover, while important work has been conducted on the role of urbanization, it will be important to better understand how low socioeconomic status may place individuals at greatest risk for body image concerns and unhealthy behaviors in urban settings. Finally, using an intersectional lens will enrich the literature and provide a more fine-grained understanding of the way vulnerability to these concerns is distributed through the population (Burke et al., Reference Burke, Schaefer, Hazzard and Rodgers2020).

Expanding to more culturally relevant understandings of body image

As described above, a large amount of the existing literature has centered on body weight and shape, with a predominant focus on thinness and to some extent on muscularity. Evidence for the importance of other aspects of appearance in body image exists, however (Lowy et al., Reference Lowy, Rodgers, Franko, Pluhar and Webb2021). Future research should seek to better characterize the aspects of appearance that may be particularly central to body image in different groups so as to conduct culturally sensitive research.

In addition, greater focus on positive elements of body image will help to shift conceptualizations toward a strengths-based model and to increase understanding of the unique strengths certain cultural groups may have in terms of positive body image. In particular, exploring settings in which appearance is less salient may be helpful for understanding how to decenter appearance in affluent and highly Westernized contexts.

Preventing and decreasing body image concerns

Finally, given the global rates and commonalities of body image concerns, greater efforts should be made to prevent and decrease these concerns. Although scalable interventions have started to emerge across the globe (Marchand et al., Reference Marchand, Stice, Rohde and Becker2011; Craddock et al., Reference Craddock, Garbett, Haywood, Nasution, White, Saraswati, Rizkiah, Medise and Diedrichs2021; Garbett et al., Reference Garbett, Craddock, Haywood, Nasution, White, Saraswati, Medise, Diedrichs and Williamson2022), this work is still in its infancy. In addition to developing such programs, working with stakeholders and policymakers is crucial to decreasing universal risk for body image concerns effectively at a global level, with Western media emerging as a particularly important target (Bell et al., Reference Bell, Rodgers and Paxton2016).

Conclusions

The findings from this review highlight how body image concerns constitute a burden at the global level, with higher levels of risk among already vulnerable groups. The oppressive nature of appearance ideals, combined with their function to maintain social hierarchies and generate profit, contributes to explaining this increased risk. The variations in risk observed at the global level, which map onto levels of economic development and international power, are to some extent replicated within countries (such as within the USA where minoritized groups experience greater concerns) and geographic areas (e.g. in Europe, where lower income countries report higher levels of body image concerns). However, countries in which Westernized appearance ideals are still only gaining ground, and where the social emphasis on appearance is lower, may still be protected from body image concerns to some extent (Frederick et al., Reference Frederick, Buchanan, Sadehgi-Azar, Peplau, Haselton, Berezovskaya and Lipinski2007).

Open peer review

To view the open peer review materials for this article, please visit http://doi.org/10.1017/gmh.2023.2.

Author contributions

All authors contributed to reviewing the relevant research, drafting the first version of the manuscript, and final editing.

Competing interest

The authors have no conflicts of interest to report.

References

Aimé, A, Dion, J and Maïano, C (2022) L’image Corporelle Sous Toutes Ses Formes. PUQ, Québec, Canada.Google Scholar
Al Sabbah, H, Vereecken, CA, Elgar, FJ, Nansel, T, Aasvee, K, Abdeen, Z, Ojala, K, Ahluwalia, N and Maes, L (2009) Body weight dissatisfaction and communication with parents among adolescents in 24 countries: International cross-sectional survey. BMC Public Health 9, 52.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Alleva, JM and Tylka, TL (2021) Body functionality: A review of the literature. Body Image 36, 149171.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Almeida, M, Brown, TA, Campos, PF, Amaral, ACS and de Carvalho, PHB (2021) Dissonance‐based eating disorder prevention delivered in‐person after an online training: A randomized controlled trial for Brazilian men with body dissatisfaction. International Journal of Eating Disorders 54, 293304.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Al-Mutawa, N, Schuilenberg, SJ, Justine, R and Taher, SK (2019) Modesty, objectification, and disordered eating patterns: A comparative study between veiled and unveiled Muslim women residing in Kuwait. Medical Principles and Practice 28, 4147.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Amaral, ACS and Ferreira, MEC (2017) Body dissatisfaction and associated factors among Brazilian adolescents: A longitudinal study. Body Image 22, 3238.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ando, K, Giorgianni, FE, Danthinne, ES and Rodgers, RF (2021) Beauty ideals, social media, and body positivity: A qualitative investigation of influences on body image among young women in Japan. Body Image 38, 358369.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Austin, JL and Smith, JE (2008) Thin ideal internalization in Mexican girls: A test of the sociocultural model of eating disorders. International Journal of Eating Disorders 41, 448457.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Balogun-Mwangi, O, Robinson-Wood, TL, DeTore, NR, Edwards George, JB, Rodgers, RF and Sanchez, W (under review). Body image and Black African women: A comparative study of Kenya and Nigeria.Google Scholar
Barbosa, BD (2021) Impact of a school-based body image intervention in Portuguese adolescents: The confident me programme. Accessed 25 Jan 2022. Available at http://repositorio-aberto.up.pt.Google Scholar
Becker, AE (2004) Television, disordered eating, and young women in Fiji: Negotiating body image and identity during rapid social change. Culture, Medicine and Psychiatry 28, 533559.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, MJ, Rodgers, RF and Paxton, SJ (2016) Towards successful evidence-based universal eating disorders prevention: The importance of zooming out. Eating Behaviors 25, 8992.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Blum, RW, Li, M, Choiriyyah, I, Barnette, Q, Michielson, K and Mmari, K (2021) Body satisfaction in early adolescence: A multisite comparison. Journal of Adolescent Health 69, S39S46.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bolívar-Suárez, Y, Gómez, JAM, Yanez-Peñúñuri, LY, Anacona, CAR and Gómez, AMG (2021) Self-esteem, body image, and dating violence in Colombian adolescents and young adults. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 37, NP11628NP11651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bourdieu, P (2018). The forms of capital. In The Sociology of Economic Life. Routledge, Westport, CT. pp. 7892.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brausch, AM and Gutierrez, PM (2009) The role of body image and disordered eating as risk factors for depression and suicidal ideation in adolescents. Suicide and Life‐Threatening Behavior 39, 5871.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Brewster, ME, Sandil, R, DeBlaere, C, Breslow, A and Eklund, A (2017) “Do you even lift, bro?” objectification, minority stress, and body image concerns for sexual minority men. Psychology of Men & Masculinity 18, 8798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brewster, ME, Velez, BL, Breslow, AS and Geiger, EF (2019) Unpacking body image concerns and disordered eating for transgender women: The roles of sexual objectification and minority stress. Journal of Counseling Psychology 66, 131142.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Burke, NL, Schaefer, LM, Hazzard, VM and Rodgers, RF (2020) Where identities converge: The importance of intersectionality in eating disorders research. International Journal of Eating Disorders 53, 16051609.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cash, TF (2004) Body image: Past, present, and future. Body Image 1, 15.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Castillo, I, Solano, S and Sepúlveda, AR (2019) A controlled study of an integrated prevention program for improving disordered eating and body image among Mexican university students: A 3‐month follow‐up. European Eating Disorders Review 27, 541556.Google ScholarPubMed
Chang, FC, Lee, CM, Chen, PH, Chiu, CH, Pan, YC and Huang, TF (2013) Association of thin-ideal media exposure, body dissatisfaction and disordered eating behaviors among adolescents in Taiwan. Eating Behaviors 14, 382385.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chang, L, Li, P, Loh, RSM and Chua, THH (2019) A study of Singapore adolescent girls’ selfie practices, peer appearance comparisons, and body esteem on Instagram. Body Image 29, 9099.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chisuwa, N and O’Dea, JA (2010) Body image and eating disorders amongst Japanese adolescents. A review of the literature. Appetite 54, 515.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Compte, EJ, Sepulveda, AR and Torrente, F (2015) A two‐stage epidemiological study of eating disorders and muscle dysmorphia in male university students in Buenos Aires. International Journal of Eating Disorders 48, 10921101.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Convertino, AD, Helm, JL, Pennesi, J-L, Gonzales, M and Blashill, AJ (2021) Integrating minority stress theory and the tripartite influence model: A model of eating disordered behavior in sexual minority young adults. Appetite 163, 105204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corona, R, Hood, KB and Haffejee, F (2019) The relationship between body image perceptions and condom use outcomes in a sample of south African emerging adults. Prevention Science 20, 147156.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Corry, N, Pruzinsky, T and Rumsey, N (2009) Quality of life and psychosocial adjustment to burn injury: Social functioning, body image, and health policy perspectives. International Review of Psychiatry 21, 539548.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Craddock, N, Garbett, KM, Haywood, S, Nasution, K, White, P, Saraswati, L, Rizkiah, C, Medise, B and Diedrichs, PC (2021) ‘Dove confident me Indonesia: Single session’: Study protocol for a randomised controlled trial to evaluate a school-based body image intervention among Indonesian adolescents. BMC Public Health 21, 2101.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Danthinne, ES, Giorgianni, FE, Ando, K and Rodgers, RF (2022) Real beauty: Effects of a body‐positive video on body image and capacity to mitigate exposure to social media images. British Journal of Health Psychology 27, 320337.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dapi, LN, Omoloko, C, Janlert, U, Dahlgren, L and Håglin, L (2007) I eat to be happy, to be strong, and to live. Perceptions of rural and urban adolescents in Cameroon, Africa. Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior 39, 320326.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Davison, TE and McCabe, MP (2006) Adolescent body image and psychosocial functioning. Journal of Social Psychology 146, 1530.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Carvalho, PHB, Alvarenga, MS and Ferreira, MEC (2017) An etiological model of disordered eating behaviors among Brazilian women. Appetite 116, 164172.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
de Carvalho, PHB and Ferreira, MEC (2020) Disordered eating and body change behaviours: Support for the tripartite influence model among Brazilian male university students. Ciência & Saúde Coletiva 25, 44854495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delgado-Floody, P, Guzmán-Guzmán, IP, Caamaño-Navarrete, F, Jerez-Mayorga, D, Zulic-Agramunt, C and Cofré-Lizama, A (2021) Depression is associated with lower levels of physical activity, body image dissatisfaction, and obesity in Chilean preadolescents. Psychology, Health & Medicine 26, 518531.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Diedrichs, PC, Atkinson, MJ, Steer, RJ, Garbett, KM, Rumsey, N and Halliwell, E (2015) Effectiveness of a brief school-based body image intervention ‘dove confident me: Single Session’ when delivered by teachers and researchers: Results from a cluster randomised controlled trial. Behaviour Research and Therapy 74, 94104.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Drummond, MJ (2002) Men, body image, and eating disorders. International Journal of Men’s Health 1, 89103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Eddy, KT, Hennessey, M and Thompson-Brenner, H (2007) Eating pathology in east African women: The role of media exposure and globalization. The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease 195(3), 196202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Edmonds, A (2007) ‘The poor have the right to be beautiful’: Cosmetic surgery in neoliberal Brazil. Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute 13, 363381.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ejike, CE (2015) Body shape dissatisfaction is a ‘normative discontent’ in a young-adult Nigerian population: A study of prevalence and effects on health-related quality of life. Journal of Epidemiology and Global Health 5, S19S26.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fitzsimmons-Craft, EE (2011) Social psychological theories of disordered eating in college women: Review and integration. Clinical Psychology Review 31, 12241237.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Forbes, GB, Jung, J, Vaamonde, JD, Omar, A, Paris, L and Formiga, NS (2012) Body dissatisfaction and disordered eating in three cultures: Argentina, Brazil, and the US. Sex Roles 66, 677694.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frederick, DA, Buchanan, GM, Sadehgi-Azar, L, Peplau, LA, Haselton, MG, Berezovskaya, A and Lipinski, RE (2007) Desiring the muscular ideal: Men’s body satisfaction in the United States, Ukraine, and Ghana. Psychology of Men & Masculinity 8, 103117.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Frederick, DA, Crerand, CE, Brown, TA, Perez, M, Best, CR, Cook-Cottone, CP, Compte, EJ, Convertino, L, Gordon, AR, Malcarne, VL, Nagata, JM, Parent, MC, Pennesi, J, Pila, E, Rodgers, RF, Schaefer, LM, Thompson, JK, Tylka, TL and Murray, SB (2022) Demographic predictors of body image satisfaction: The US body project I. Body Image 41, 1731.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Furnham, A and Baguma, P (1994) Cross-cultural differences in the evaluation of male and female body shapes. International Journal of Eating Disorders 15, 8189.3.0.CO;2-D>CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Garbett, KM, Craddock, N, Haywood, S, Nasution, K, White, P, Saraswati, LA, Medise, BE, Diedrichs, PC and Williamson, H (2022) A novel, scalable social media–based intervention (“Warna-Warni Waktu”) to reduce body dissatisfaction among young Indonesian women: Protocol for a parallel randomized controlled trial. JMIR Research Protocols 11, e33596.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gorrell, S, Trainor, C and Le Grange, D (2019) The impact of urbanization on risk for eating disorders. Current Opinion in Psychiatry 32, 242.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Gruber, E, Kalkbrenner, MT and Hitter, TL (2022) A complex conceptualization of beauty in Latinx women: A mixed methods study. Body Image 41, 432442.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Halliwell, E (2015) Future directions for positive body image research. Body Image 14, 177189.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hesse-Biber, S, Leavy, P, Quinn, CE and Zoino, J (2006) The mass marketing of disordered eating and eating disorders: The social psychology of women, thinness and culture. Women’s Studies 29, 208224.Google Scholar
Holmqvist, K and Frisén, A (2010) Body dissatisfaction across cultures: Findings and research problems. European Eating Disorders Review 18, 133146.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hsu, JL, Hung, RT and Antoine, M (2021) Investigating the linkages between BMI, body image, and SATAQ among young Asian females. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, 7460.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hunter, ML (2011) Buying racial capital: Skin-bleaching and cosmetic surgery in a globalized world. The Journal of Pan African Studies 4, 142164.Google Scholar
Jackson, RT, Rashed, M and Saad-Eldin, R (2003) Rural urban differences in weight, body image, and dieting behavior among adolescent Egyptian schoolgirls. International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition 54, 111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jarry, JL, Dignard, NA and O’Driscoll, LM (2019) Appearance investment: The construct that changed the field of body image. Body Image 31, 221244.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jung, J, Forbes, GB and Lee, Y-J (2009) Body dissatisfaction and disordered eating among early adolescents from Korea and the US. Sex Roles 61, 4254.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kaewpradub, N, Kiatrungrit, K, Hongsanguansri, S and Pavasuthipaisit, C (2017) Association among internet usage, body image and eating behaviors of secondary school students. Shanghai Archives of Psychiatry 29, 208.Google ScholarPubMed
Kaziga, R, Muchunguzi, C, Achen, D and Kools, S (2021) Beauty is skin deep; the self-perception of adolescents and young women in construction of body image within the Ankole society. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, 7840.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Khalaf, A, Westergren, A, Berggren, V, Ekblom, Ö and Al-Hazzaa, HM (2015) Perceived and ideal body image in young women in South Western Saudi Arabia. Journal of Obesity 2015, 697163.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Koutsantoni, M, Kkeli, N and Argyrides, M (2020) The comparison of Cyprus to six other European countries on body image satisfaction, appearance investment and weight and appearance-related anxiety. The European Journal of Counselling Psychology 8, 3242.Google Scholar
Kvalem, IL, Graham, CA, Hald, GM, Carvalheira, AA, Janssen, E and Štulhofer, A (2020) The role of body image in sexual satisfaction among partnered older adults: A population-based study in four European countries. European Journal of Ageing 17(2), 163173.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leiva-Peña, V, Rubí-González, P and Vicente-Parada, B (2021) Social determinants of mental health: Public policies based on the biopsychosocial model in Latin American countries. Determinantes sociais da saúde mental: políticas públicas a partir do Modelo biopsicossocial em países latino-americanos. Pan American Journal of Public Health 45, e158.Google ScholarPubMed
Lemes, DCM, Câmara, SG, Alves, GG and Aerts, D (2018) Body image satisfaction and subjective wellbeing among ninth-grade students attending state schools in Canoas, Brazil. Ciencia & Saude Coletiva 23, 42894298.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
León-Paucar, SD, Calderón-Olivos, BC, Calizaya-Milla, YE and Saintila, J (2021) Depression, dietary intake, and body image during coronavirus disease 2019 quarantine in Peru: An online cross-sectional study. SAGE Open Medicine 9, 20503121211051914.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lewis-Smith, H, Diedrichs, PC and Halliwell, E (2019) Cognitive-behavioral roots of body image therapy and prevention. Body Image 31, 309320.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lipinski, JP and Pope, HG (2002) Body ideals in young Samoan men: A comparison with men in North America and Europe. International Journal of Men’s Health 1, 163.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lowy, AS, Rodgers, RF, Franko, DL, Pluhar, E and Webb, JB (2021) Body image and internalization of appearance ideals in black women: An update and call for culturally-sensitive research. Body Image 39, 313327.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marchand, E, Stice, E, Rohde, P and Becker, CB (2011) Moving from efficacy to effectiveness trials in prevention research. Behaviour Research and Therapy 49, 3241.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Marquez, B and Benitez, T (2021) Individual and family factors in disordered eating patterns of Mexican-American women. American Journal of Health Behavior 45, 10501058.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Matias, TS, Silva, KS, Duca, GFD, Bertuol, C, Lopes, MVV and Nahas, MV (2020) Attitudes towards body weight dissatisfaction associated with adolescents’ perceived health and sleep (PeNSE 2015). Ciência & Saúde Coletiva 25, 14831490.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McArthur, LH, Holbert, D and Pena, M (2005) An exploration of the attitudinal and perceptual dimensions of body image among male and female adolescents from six Latin American cities. Adolescence 40, 801816.Google ScholarPubMed
McElhone, S, Kearney, JM, Giachetti, I, Zunft, HJ and Martínez, JA (1999) Body image perception in relation to recent weight changes and strategies for weight loss in a nationally representative sample in the European Union. Public Health Nutrition 2, 143151.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLaren, L and Kuh, D (2004) Women’s body dissatisfaction, social class, and social mobility. Social Science & Medicine 58, 15751584.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McLean, SA and Paxton, SJ (2019) Body image in the context of eating disorders. Psychiatric Clinics 42, 145156.Google ScholarPubMed
Melki, JP, Hitti, EA, Oghia, MJ and Mufarrij, AA (2015) Media exposure, mediated social comparison to idealized images of muscularity, and anabolic steroid use. Health Communication 30, 473484.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mellor, D, McCabe, M, Ricciardelli, L and Merino, ME (2008) Body dissatisfaction and body change behaviors in Chile: The role of sociocultural factors. Body Image 5, 205215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mellor, D, Waterhouse, M, Bt Mamat, NH, Xu, X, Cochrane, J, Mccabe, M and Ricciardelli, L (2013) Which body features are associated with female adolescents’ body dissatisfaction? A cross-cultural study in Australia, China and Malaysia. Body Image 10, 5461.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Michels, N and Amenyah, SD (2017) Body size ideals and dissatisfaction in Ghanaian adolescents: Role of media, lifestyle and well-being. Public Health 146, 6574.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moreno-Domínguez, S, Rutsztein, G, Geist, TA, Pomichter, EE and Cepeda-Benito, A (2019) Body mass index and nationality (argentine vs. Spanish) moderate the relationship between internalization of the thin ideal and body dissatisfaction: A conditional mediation model. Frontiers in Psychology 10, 582.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Musaiger, A (2015) Body weight concern among female university students in five Arab countries–a preliminary cross-cultural study. Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine 22, 349352.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Naeimi, AF, Haghighian, HK, Gargari, BP, Alizadeh, M and Rouzitalab, T (2016) Eating disorders risk and its relation to self-esteem and body image in Iranian university students of medical sciences. Eating and Weight Disorders 21, 597605.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Naigaga, DA, Jahanlu, D, Claudius, HM, Gjerlaug, AK, Barikmo, I and Henjum, S (2018) Body size perceptions and preferences favor overweight in adult Saharawi refugees. Nutrition Journal 17, 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Omori, M, Yamazaki, Y, Aizawa, N and de Zoysa, P (2017) Thin-ideal internalization and body dissatisfaction in Sri Lankan adolescents. Journal of Health Psychology 22, 18301840.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Otakpor, AN and Ehimigbai, M (2016) Body image perception and mental health of in-school adolescents in Benin City, Nigeria. The Nigerian Postgraduate Medical Journal 23, 7178.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pachankis, JE, Clark, KA, Burton, CL, Hughto, JMW, Bränström, R and Keene, DE (2020) Sex, status, competition, and exclusion: Intraminority stress from within the gay community and gay and bisexual men’s mental health. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 119, 713.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Peterson, RD, Grippo, KP and Tantleff-Dunn, S (2008) Empowerment and powerlessness: A closer look at the relationship between feminism, body image and eating disturbance. Sex Roles 58(9), 639648.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pinheiro, KAT, Horta, BL, Pinheiro, RT, Horta, LL, Terres, NG and Silva, RA (2007) Common mental disorders in adolescents: A population based cross-sectional study. Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry 29, 241245.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Piran, N (2019) Handbook of Positive Body Image and Embodiment: Constructs, Protective Factors, and Interventions. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Prioreschi, A, Wrottesley, SV, Cohen, E, Reddy, A, Said-Mohamed, R, Twine, R, Tollman, SM, Kahn, K, Dunger, DB and Norris, SA (2017) Examining the relationships between body image, eating attitudes, BMI, and physical activity in rural and urban south African young adult females using structural equation modeling. PLoS One 12, e0187508.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prusaczyk, E and Choma, BL (2018) Skin tone surveillance, depression, and life satisfaction in Indian women: Colour-blind racial ideology as a moderator. Body Image 27, 179186.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Quiñones, IC, Herbozo, S and Haedt-Matt, AA (2022) Body dissatisfaction among ethnic subgroups of Latin women: An examination of acculturative stress and ethnic identity. Body Image 41, 272283.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Ramos, P, Moreno-Maldonado, C, Moreno, C and Rivera, F (2019) The role of body image in internalizing mental health problems in Spanish adolescents: An analysis according to sex, age, and socioeconomic status. Frontiers in Psychology 10, 1952.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Resende, TRO, Almeida, M, dos Santos Alvarenga, M, Brown, TA and de Carvalho, PHB (2022) Dissonance-based eating disorder prevention improves intuitive eating: A randomized controlled trial for Brazilian women with body dissatisfaction. Eating and Weight Disorders-Studies on Anorexia, Bulimia and Obesity 27, 10991112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rivero, A, Killoren, SE, Kline, G and Campione-Barr, N (2022) Negative messages from parents and sisters and Latina college students’ body image shame. Body Image 42, 98109.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Roberts, TA, Calogero, RM and Gervais, SJ (2018) Objectification theory: Continuing contributions to feminist psychology. In Travis, CB, White, JW, Rutherford, A, Williams, WS, Cook, SL and Wyche, KF (eds.), APA Handbook of the Psychology of Women: History, Theory, and Battlegrounds, American Psychological Association, Washington, D.C. pp. 249271.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rochelle, TL and Hu, W (2017) Media influence on drive for thinness, body satisfaction, and eating attitudes among young women in Hong Kong and China. Psychology, Health & Medicine 22, 310318.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rodgers, RF, Chabrol, H and Paxton, SJ (2011) An exploration of the tripartite influence model of body dissatisfaction and disordered eating among Australian and French college women. Body Image 8, 208215.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rutsztein, G, Murawski, B, Leonardelli, E, Scappatura, ML, Elizathe, L, Custodio, J, … Keegan, E (2021) Prevention of eating disorders: Impact on female adolescents from Argentina with and without dieting behavior. Mental Health & Prevention 22, 200202.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saghir, S and Hyland, L (2017) The effects of immigration and media influence on body image among Pakistani men. American Journal of Men’s Health 11, 930940.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Santhira Shagar, P, Donovan, CL, Boddy, J, Tapp, C and Harris, N (2021) Does culture moderate the relationship between body dissatisfaction and quality of life? A comparative study of Australian and Malaysian emerging adults. Health Psychology Open 8, 20551029211018378.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schaefer, LM, Burke, NL, Anderson, LM, Thompson, JK, Heinberg, LJ, Bardone-Cone, AM, MKH, N, Frederick, DA, Anderson, DA, Schaumberg, K, Nerini, A, Stefanile, C, Dittmar, H, Klump, KL, Vercellone, AC and Paxton, SJ (2019) Comparing internalization of appearance ideals and appearance-related pressures among women from the United States, Italy, England, and Australia. Eating and Weight Disorders 24, 947951.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shih, MY and Kubo, C (2005) Body shape preference and body satisfaction of Taiwanese and Japanese female college students. Psychiatry Research 133, 263271.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Shroff, H and Thompson, JK (2006) The tripartite influence model of body image and eating disturbance: A replication with adolescent girls. Body Image 3, 1723.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Sidi, Y, Geller, S, Abu Sinni, A, Levy, S and Handelzalts, JE (2020) Body image among Muslim women in Israel: Exploring religion and sociocultural pressures. Women & Health 60, 10951108.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Silva, DAS, Nahas, MV, de Sousa, TF, Del Duca, GF and Peres, KG (2011) Prevalence and associated factors with body image dissatisfaction among adults in southern Brazil: A population-based study. Body Image 8, 427431.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Silveira, ML, Ertel, KA, Dole, N and Chasan-Taber, L (2015) The role of body image in prenatal and postpartum depression: A critical review of the literature. Archives of Women’s Mental Health 18, 409421.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stefanile, C, Matera, C, Nerini, A and Pasciucco, L (2015) Predittori Dell’interesse per La Chirurgia Estetica. Influenze Socioculturali E Insoddisfazione Corporea. Psicologia Della Salute 1, 108130.Google Scholar
Swami, V, Frederick, DA, Aavik, T, Alcalay, L, Allik, J, Anderson, D, Andrianto, S, Arora, A, Brännström, Å and Cunningham, J (2010) The attractive female body weight and female body dissatisfaction in 26 countries across 10 world regions: Results of the international body project I. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 36, 309325.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Swami, V and Jaafar, JL (2012) Factor structure of the body appreciation scale among Indonesian women and men: Further evidence of a two-factor solution in a non-Western population. Body Image 9, 539542.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Swami, V, Mada, R and Tovée, MJ (2012) Weight discrepancy and body appreciation of Zimbabwean women in Zimbabwe and Britain. Body Image 9, 559562.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Swami, V, Tran, US, Barron, D, Afhami, R, Aimé, A, Almenara, CA, Dal, NA, Amaral, ACS, et al. (2020) The breast size satisfaction survey (BSSS): Breast size dissatisfaction and its antecedents and outcomes in women from 40 nations. Body Image 32, 199217.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tayfur, SN and Evrensel, A (2020) Investigation of the relationships between eating attitudes, body image and depression among Turkish university students. Rivista di Psichiatria 55, 9097.Google ScholarPubMed
Tayyem, RF, Bawadi, HA, AbuMweis, SS, Allehdan, S, Agraib, L, Ghazzawi, HA, Al-Mannai, MA and Musaiger, AO (2016) Association between mass media and body weight concern among Jordanian adolescents’ residents of Amman: The role of gender and obesity. Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine 21, 430438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Terhoeven, V, Nikendei, C, Bärnighausen, T, Bountogo, M, Friederich, HC, Ouermi, L, Sié, A and Harling, G (2020) Eating disorders, body image and media exposure among adolescent girls in rural Burkina Faso. Tropical Medicine & International Health 25, 132141.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Thompson, JK, Heinberg, LJ, Altabe, M and Tantleff-Dunn, S (1999) Exacting Beauty: Theory, Assessment, and Treatment of Body Image Disturbance. Washington, DC: American Psychological Association.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thornborrow, T, Onwuegbusi, T, Mohamed, S, Boothroyd, LG and Tovée, MJ (2020) Muscles and the media: A natural experiment across cultures in men’s body image. Frontiers in Psychology 11, 495.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Todd, J and Swami, V (2020) Assessing the measurement invariance of two positive body image instruments in adults from Malaysia and the United Kingdom. Body Image 34, 112116.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Toselli, S, Rinaldo, N and Gualdi-Russo, E (2016) Body image perception of African immigrants in Europe. Globalization and Health 12, 48.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Tovée, MJ, Swami, V, Furnham, A and Mangalparsad, R (2006) Changing perceptions of attractiveness as observers are exposed to a different culture. Evolution and Human Behavior 27, 443456.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Træen, B, Markovic, A and Kvalem, IL (2016) Sexual satisfaction and body image: A cross-sectional study among Norwegian young adults. Sexual and Relationship Therapy 31, 123137.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tuoyire, DA, Kumi-Kyereme, A, Doku, DT and Amo-Adjei, J (2018) Perceived ideal body size of Ghanaian women: “not too skinny, but not too fat. Women & Health 8, 583597.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tylka, TL and Wood-Barcalow, NL (2015) What is and what is not positive body image? Conceptual foundations and construct definition. Body Image 14, 118129.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Veldhuis, J, Te Poel, F, Pepping, R, Konijn, EA and Spekman, ML (2017) Skinny is prettier and Normal: I want to be Normal”—Perceived body image of non-Western ethnic minority children in the Netherlands. Body Image 20, 7486.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Widdows, H (2018) Perfect me: Beauty as an Ethical Ideal. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Yamamiya, Y, Shroff, H and Thompson, JK (2008) The tripartite influence model of body image and eating disturbance: A replication with a Japanese sample. International Journal of Eating Disorders 41, 8891.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
You, S and Shin, K (2020) Sociocultural influences, drive for thinness, drive for muscularity, and body dissatisfaction among Korean undergraduates. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, 5260.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zainal, L, Stevens, SD, Harriger, JA and Herbozo, S (2020) Internalization of the thin-ideal and eating pathology in Kuwaiti adult women. Frontiers in Psychology 11, 559711.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed

Author comment: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR1

Comments

8th August 2022

Dear Sir,

My coauthors and I would like to submit our manuscript titled “Body image as a global mental health concern” to Global Mental Health. Our review highlights the prevalence of body image concerns across the globe as well as associated risk factors, and the need for universal and targeted prevention.

Many thanks in advance for your time and consideration. We look forward to hearing from you,

Yours sincerely,

Rachel Rodgers, Ph.D.. FAED

Associate Professor

Review: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR2

Comments

Comments to Author: Thank you for the opportunity to review this interesting manuscript. It is well-written, well-organized, and takes a much-needed global perspective on the widespread body image concerns across continents. It describes different theoretical frameworks for understanding body image concerns globally and it also summarizes what is known from research in different regions. I very much enjoyed reading this paper. Theories and results are clearly described. I especially liked the idea of interpreting the different rates in body image concerns in the light of the different theoretical frameworks and I think the paper could be improved by adding even more discussion/links between these. Below are my more specific comments:

Page 2: Body image is defined as “thoughts, feelings and behaviors of an individual related to their own appearance”, but body image may also comprise thoughts, feelings and behaviors related to other aspects of the body (health, functionality). Does this study focus more on the appearance domain? Please specify.

Page 2: “the early literature” – what time period does this refer to?

Page 2: it says “individuals whose identities afford them lower power and privilege” – could you please give examples?

Page 4: “toned yet curvy ideal” seems to describe a female ideal although this is not made explicit. Is there a global male ideal too?

Page 4: Critical feminist theories are salient in current body image research. Should this perspective be more emphasized in the theoretical part?

Page 2-5: It strikes me after reading the results that the research described seems to be investigating body image concerns mostly from sociocultural theory. It could be a good idea to think about the order of presentation of the theories, for example by starting with the most explored theory.

Page 6: it is stated that effective interventions have been developed – could you add some information regarding the focus of these interventions? This could be helpful for the other regions too.

Page 6: “In contrast, Latin countries…”. The previous sentence describes findings from Portugal which could be defined as a European Latin country. Should “in contrast” be removed from the sentence? Findings seem not to be in contrast. Should it be “Latin countries such as Portugal and X..”?

On page 14: “with higher levels of risk among already vulnerable groups.” – which are these groups? For example, one of the findings is that body image concerns are more salient in high-income English-speaking countries. This may not be considered a vulnerable group.

Some overall comments:

As mentioned above, I would like to see more connections between the results and the theories described. This is only briefly discussed on page 12 and I find this part very interesting. I think extending this discussion (for example in a section of its own) could really improve the paper. How can we understand the results in relation to the theories described? Is there support for all theories? How should future intervention/prevention look like considering these findings/theoretical frameworks?

Finally, there are a few grammatical errors/ typos in the MS, for example page 2 “privilege than underpin”, and page 4 “the role (of) appearance comparisons”.

Review: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR3

Conflict of interest statement

I have personal relationships with some authors. But I do not believe that this have influenced my review.

Comments

Comments to Author: Manuscript ID: GMH-22-0225

The authors proposed an important review of the theoretical frameworks about body image concerns through the different regions of the globe. This is a relevant topic to be discussed, given its implications in our society, especially in mental health field. That said, I have some questions, concerns and comments.

1. I understand the limitation of the words count to give an in-depth discussion about the theoretical concepts elected. However, I think that the presentation of the theories (Body Capital, Sociocultural and Minority stress) is excessively superficial.

P.3 – when talking about Body Capital, the authors cite Edmonds (2007) and Hunter (2011) that are secondary references, i.e., they cite the original authors. It would be better if the authors cited original theorists such as Pierre Bourdieu.

P. 3 – the topic’s number is 2.2 instead of 2.3.

P. 4 – I think it is important add some references to the following phrase: “These theories also highlight how […] existing systems of power and privilege”.

P. 5 – I suggest better explain the integrative model by Convertino et al. (2021).

2. The topic about the empirical evidence across countries is very diverse. They lack unity and cohesion. The information about some regions is more complete and more detailed than others. Also, the authors cite some old studies (from 2010, for example) to sustain the argumentation. About prevention programs, I suggest that the authors standardize the inclusion of eating disorders prevention programs that contain body image concerns in its scripts (such as the Body Project versions cited in the Latin America topic), making this information clear in the text. For example, when talking about prevention programs target specifically on body image concerns, this should be highlighted as well as when the programs that are being cited are ED prevention interventions.

P. 7 – The authors cited Diedrichs et al. (2015) as a study among non-English speaking countries. However, this research was carried out in UK.

P. 7 – The study from Barbosa (2021) is not cited in the references.

3. In order to better establish the relevance and innovation of the proposed review, the authors should add a topic summarizing how the found results across globe confirm or refute the theoretical concepts elected and presented (Body Capital, Sociocultural and Minority stress). Moreover, a better discussion about the implication of these information to the global mental health ins recommended.

Specific questions from the editor:

Question 1:

For global reviews, how well does the review cover global content in the inclusion of research, presentation of results, and/or in the discussion and implications? And how could this be improved/expanded?

The manuscript gives an overall framework about body image concerns around different regions of the globe. Besides that, it would be important to better discuss the implications of these information to the global mental health field.

Recommendation: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR4

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR5

Comments

No accompanying comment.

Decision: Body image as a global mental health concern — R0/PR6

Comments

No accompanying comment.