Jag ska nog bara äta en halv semla - Kvinnors upplevelse av hälsorelaterad kommunikation på arbetsplatsen
Abstract
Health and wellness have become central topics in today's working life, with many
employers encouraging healthy lifestyles through activities such as health promotion, dietary
advice and workplace exercise opportunities. However, these efforts may not be neutral, they
intersect with societal norms regarding body ideals, health and morality. In this context, the
workplace can become a site where health norms are communicated not only through formal
communication, but foremost through informal, everyday interactions. This study explores
women’s experience of evaluative and comparative health-related communication. This
includes implicit and explicit norms and comments about food, exercise and health within
public sector workplaces in Sweden. While health communication is often intended to
promote well-being, it may also reinforce weight stigma, shame and social exclusion,
particularly among women.
To investigate this phenomenon, we conducted a qualitative, exploratory study based
on ten semi-structured interviews with women aged 23-59, all employed in the public sector.
Participants were recruited through convenience sampling, including outreach via personal
networks and social media. The interviews were conducted via Zoom and analyzed using
thematic analysis. Six main themes were identified in the interview material: emotional
impact, values related to health, body and food, comparisons with others, comments from the
surrounding environment, the influence of communication on the group and the individual
and the categorization of individuals.
The main result of the study is that evaluative and comparative health-related
communication seems to be widespread in the workplace and is often experienced as
emotionally taxing. Participants described how such communication triggered feelings of
shame, inadequacy and frustration, and in some cases led to changes in behaviour, such as
avoiding food in social settings or justifying their eating habits. Although some interactions
were perceived as positive or motivational, participants felt that subtle comments, jokes or
social comparisons contributed to an internalized pressure to conform to health ideals.
Furthermore, the findings may suggest that these norms are reproduced mainly through
implicit communication and that women play a central role in sustaining them. Younger
participants frequently pointed to older female colleagues as primary actors in reproducing
diet culture and health norms.
In a broader perspective, the study contributes to theoretical discussions on social
norms and weight stigma in organizational contexts. It highlights the need for increased
awareness of how health-related conversations may affect workplace inclusion and individual
well-being. Organizations should foster reflective communication where health promotion
does not become a source of pressure or exclusion. Rather than prohibiting such
conversations, the aim should be to create spaces where diverse bodies, behaviours and
choices are respected.
Degree
Student essay
Date
2025-07-04Author
Malmström, Fanny
Johansson, Lisa
Keywords
Health communication, health norms, weight stigma, workplace
Language
swe