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Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers

The aim of the study was to compare exercise recommendations, attitudes, and behaviors of personal trainers toward clients of different weight statuses. Fifty-two personal trainers participated in the study. The data collection was organized into two phases. In phase one, trainers read a profile and...

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Autores principales: FONTANA, FABIO, BOPES, JONATHAN, BENDIXEN, SETH, SPEED, TYLER, GEORGE, MEGAN, MACK, MICK
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Berkeley Electronic Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5955305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29795735
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author FONTANA, FABIO
BOPES, JONATHAN
BENDIXEN, SETH
SPEED, TYLER
GEORGE, MEGAN
MACK, MICK
author_facet FONTANA, FABIO
BOPES, JONATHAN
BENDIXEN, SETH
SPEED, TYLER
GEORGE, MEGAN
MACK, MICK
author_sort FONTANA, FABIO
collection PubMed
description The aim of the study was to compare exercise recommendations, attitudes, and behaviors of personal trainers toward clients of different weight statuses. Fifty-two personal trainers participated in the study. The data collection was organized into two phases. In phase one, trainers read a profile and watched the video displaying an interview of either an obese or an average-weight client. Profiles and video interviews were identical except for weight status. Then, trainers provided exercise recommendations and rated their attitude toward the client. In phase two, trainers personally met an obese or an average-weight mock client. Measures were duration and number of advices provided by the trainer to a question posed by the client and sitting distance between trainer and client. There were no significant differences in exercise intensity (p = .94), duration of first session (p = .65), and total exercise duration of first week (p = .76) prescribed to the obese and average-weight clients. The attitude of the personal trainers toward the obese client were not significantly different from the attitude of personal trainers toward the average-weight client (p = .58). The number of advices provided (p = .49), the duration of the answer (p = .55), and the distance personal trainers sat from the obese client (p = .68) were not significantly different from the behaviors displayed toward the average-weight client. Personal trainers did not discriminate against obese clients in professional settings.
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spelling pubmed-59553052018-05-21 Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers FONTANA, FABIO BOPES, JONATHAN BENDIXEN, SETH SPEED, TYLER GEORGE, MEGAN MACK, MICK Int J Exerc Sci Original Research The aim of the study was to compare exercise recommendations, attitudes, and behaviors of personal trainers toward clients of different weight statuses. Fifty-two personal trainers participated in the study. The data collection was organized into two phases. In phase one, trainers read a profile and watched the video displaying an interview of either an obese or an average-weight client. Profiles and video interviews were identical except for weight status. Then, trainers provided exercise recommendations and rated their attitude toward the client. In phase two, trainers personally met an obese or an average-weight mock client. Measures were duration and number of advices provided by the trainer to a question posed by the client and sitting distance between trainer and client. There were no significant differences in exercise intensity (p = .94), duration of first session (p = .65), and total exercise duration of first week (p = .76) prescribed to the obese and average-weight clients. The attitude of the personal trainers toward the obese client were not significantly different from the attitude of personal trainers toward the average-weight client (p = .58). The number of advices provided (p = .49), the duration of the answer (p = .55), and the distance personal trainers sat from the obese client (p = .68) were not significantly different from the behaviors displayed toward the average-weight client. Personal trainers did not discriminate against obese clients in professional settings. Berkeley Electronic Press 2018-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5955305/ /pubmed/29795735 Text en
spellingShingle Original Research
FONTANA, FABIO
BOPES, JONATHAN
BENDIXEN, SETH
SPEED, TYLER
GEORGE, MEGAN
MACK, MICK
Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title_full Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title_fullStr Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title_full_unstemmed Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title_short Discrimination against Obese Exercise Clients: An Experimental Study of Personal Trainers
title_sort discrimination against obese exercise clients: an experimental study of personal trainers
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5955305/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29795735
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