Onset of Weight Gain and Health Concerns for Men: Findings from the TAP Programme
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Intervention Context
2.2. Ethical Consideration
2.3. Instrumentation
Analysis
3. Analysis
3.1. Attribution of Weight Gain
Mr R:… I suppose since when the kids arrived. I’ve always been quite active, always played football, always done something and then the kids came along, that stopped so before you know it you’re not younger I was eating the same sort of stuff because you’re exercising it’s going off… burning it off, but stopping the exercise. It’s because there’s less time you’re eating more convenient.
Mr E: I suppose… I mean, there’s more pressure at work now because I’ve got more of a high… more of a managerial role. So, it has… where work roles changed so there’s more responsibility and more time there. So, there’s less sort of I suppose flexibility in when you eat and stuff like that but I need something quick and get on with it.
Mr C: I have been putting on weight for years, Mark. I stopped playing football about the age of 35–40ish but because I run my own business, well, I can manage my work when I play football, training and stuff like that, and I wasn’t eating as much, but when I stopped playing football and started to settle into life and with having my own business and taking clients out, as you do when you have clients, you take them out for a meal, or a drink and the easier life in relation to social events was like the big thing, so I started to put the weight on.
Mr R: Then you probably have a cup of tea with some biscuits although you didn’t need it but they’re there and you go down that slippery slope and possibly if there was a beer, you’d go and have a beer or something.
Mr E: Crisps. If they’re not in the house, it doesn’t bother me but if they are in the house, I’ll have to have a packet.
Mr C: I think there may be something about starchy stuff that makes you sort of addicted, but I know for a fact that chocolate and crisps are one of my biggest fall-downs. I will be sitting there or might be driving somewhere, and I put a Mars Bar in my mouth rather than an orange or something like that.
Mr E: You know, I’ve just sat a bit in the evening you know, you’re comfortable, you are relaxed, chilled watching the telly or something like that… my biggest downfall which I’m concentrating on at the moment is I like to pick in the evening. It wouldn’t necessarily bother me if I don’t eat during the day.
I: So, what foods do you know you shouldn’t eat but find hard to resist?
Mr S: Probably crisps… probably savouries more than sweets you know. You know, if somebody said to me in the evening, sitting down do you want a bar of chocolate or a tub of Pringles, I’ll go for Pringles.
3.2. Concerns over Health and Weight
I: What concerns do you have about being overweight?
Mr C: Well, my biggest concern is that after putting on a lot of weight I had a heart attack about 15 years ago, so I don’t want to go back into that situation again. I’ve had no problem since then, but a lot of the problem was due to diabetes. I want to see my days out; I want to be single again and enjoy life instead of carrying on being fat.
Mr E: I need to lose weight to help with my blood pressure and get me off the tablets because I hate taking tablets at the best of times and I have to take a stupid amount now. What is it, four tablets I take a day… and if I lose weight there’s no reason why I then have to take… you know, or the doses come down you know?
Mr B: Yeah, same with cholesterol as well, that was it, cholesterol test they did. That was right in the middle, that was 5, fine. Before I lost my 5½ stone last year, I put it all back on in less than a year… You could say that my blood sugar level now may be a lot higher because I put it on so quickly, so again. So, I’m aware and conscious that there’s health issues, if you know what I mean.
I: Which concerns do you have about being overweight such as health for instance?
Mr R: Yeah, it is like short of breath probably if you are overweight and if you, do you know even because I don’t do any exercise in the winter. So, if you have to find anything out like a couple of months we were in London with my son and we had to go up the escalator in the underground and I was knackered. The same escalator as like eight years ago when I used to work there. I used to fly up and down and now it is like… that’s it. It was absolutely a killer. I was short of breath.
Mr R: I suppose I’ve never really had any health concerns, but I suppose as I’m getting older and you see everybody else that you know… it’s slowly started to drift in the back of your mind your bodies sort of telling you you’ve got to start doing something.
3.3. Prior Dietary Attempts
Mr B: Huh, I’ve done all sorts of different sorts of diets, Huh, um last year I did a really good healthy eating, I wouldn’t call it diet. But it’s smaller amounts of food, more regularly, uh, maintaining your blood sugar level so you don’t get cravings, you don’t feel hungry and that worked for the time I did it. But then I put all the weight back on after … Yeah, 5½ stone, uh in 18 weeks.
I: Gosh, so you rebounded big time mate.
Mr B: Yeah, you know down, personal training, uh badminton lessons 5 times a week and then yeah, just put it all back on. You need to maintain that so you can say eat one day whatever you want and then six days. And then when it’s you on your own you go—ah—I’ll make it 2 then I’ll make it 3 and then it just slips back.
Mr B: I did Slimming World probably 6 years ago.
I: How did that go?
Mr B: Lost 5 stone on that and put all that back on… there’s a 5 stone mark here isn’t there, mean mentally when I get to that mark I stop.
Mr C.: So, I started to put the weight on but I sort of ‘yo-yo’ dieted. I would go on a diet and lose about 3 stones and then I would put it all back on again.
3.4. Feelings about Being Overweight/Obese
I: How does it feel to be overweight?
Mr E: I don’t like it.
I: What sort of feelings does it give you…?
Mr E: I feel pretty crap… you know, I sort of like get up in the morning and whatever and walked past a mirror and I think, look at that gut… but I know I should do something about it. It makes you feel pretty down really to be totally honest.
Mr T: It just makes me feel like a slug. It just makes you feel a bit depressed or whatever.
Mr R: Sluggish, tired, yeah. Low self-esteem.
Mr F: I don’t like it because I’ve never been overweight…… but it’s more… I mean, I’m overweight I wouldn’t say… I suppose technically I’m obese I would imagine from the way they do it now. … but I don’t feel huge when I’m walking around all day or anything like that…… but I notice it when I play five-a-side and my legs get tired like they never did before and I’m sure that must be as much weight as age.
Mr E: Because I don’t feel big… because of the size of my chest and stuff like that, I sort of hide behind that, well I’m a big lad, you know? Chest, I’ve got a big chest and I’ve got some boobs now but… I’ve got a huge chest you know, and I look at it and I just went, oh! When I saw a picture, I went core blimey, you are a big lad but my arms are thin, my legs are thin, I just look like a barrel. Yeah, it’s that and I think if I could lose that…
Mr C: I have been yo-yoing up and down for years Mark. It’s been a problem. I think you get comfortable—my daughter nags me to death, she’s healthy and she’s quite fit and my partner is too and my kids are all quite slim so I am like the ‘blob’ of the family and so to a degree it tends to get a bit depressing after a while when you hear that and sometimes when you hear it so often, you think I can’t be arsed. But I’ve got to this stage now where I’m sitting there thinking that I’m going to meetings and I looking at mirrors and I’m wearing a shirt and tie and I’d like to be wearing a suit but I can’t get into that suit because I can’t get one in my size so I think I’m trying to focus the mind now and trying to get back to a simple way. Ideally, in my case, I’d love to lose 10 stone.Personally, at times I feel depressed, well maybe not depressed. I feel down, what gets to me the worst is buying clothes and you go into a shop and see a really nice suit and you know they won’t have it in my size and a size 54 chest you know is getting quite ridiculous. It’s got to stop.I do feel embarrassed to be quite honest because the jokes come thick and fast and you laugh with them as part of your make up and you stick by it—it’s not killing anybody is it—it hates fat people.
Mr C: You are the first person who has ever asked me that. How do you feel? Yes, I feel shit. I would love not to be part of this programme. I mean, this programme is good and I like it because I like playing football.
3.5. Final Remarks
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Name | Age | BMI (kg/m2) |
---|---|---|
Mr C | 40 | 49.9 |
Mr E | 43 | 39.6 |
Mr B | 50 | 44.7 |
Mr R | 43 | 38.9 |
Mr T | 35 | 32.1 |
Mr C | 51 | 28.2 |
Mr F | 58 | 29.1 |
Mr S | 54 | 32.4 |
Phase | Process Description |
---|---|
1 | Transcribing of the data. Generation of ideas |
2 | Generation of codes. Process conducted across the entire data set as opposed to individual interviews. |
3 | Searching for themes. |
4 | Reviewing the themes. A review to ensure that the themes align to the codes. |
5 | Defining and naming of themes. |
6 | Producing a report based on the themes. |
TAP Programme: Recognised Interview Themes |
---|
Attribution of weight gain |
Concerns over health and weight |
Prior dietary attempts |
Feelings about being overweight/obese |
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Cortnage, M.; Pringle, A. Onset of Weight Gain and Health Concerns for Men: Findings from the TAP Programme. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010579
Cortnage M, Pringle A. Onset of Weight Gain and Health Concerns for Men: Findings from the TAP Programme. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(1):579. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010579
Chicago/Turabian StyleCortnage, Mark, and Andy Pringle. 2022. "Onset of Weight Gain and Health Concerns for Men: Findings from the TAP Programme" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 1: 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010579
APA StyleCortnage, M., & Pringle, A. (2022). Onset of Weight Gain and Health Concerns for Men: Findings from the TAP Programme. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(1), 579. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19010579