New Mexico State Gets Government Grant for ‘Fat Vests’ to Study Weight Sensitivity
Over $17,000 for ‘fat vests’ to find out what it’s like to be overweight?
Really?
Maggie Lit of Campus Reform reported.
University gets federal grant for fat vests, ‘weight sensitivity training’
New Mexico State University (NMSU) received a hefty grant from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) so students and faculty can run around campus in a fat vest as part of a “weight sensitivity training.”
The $17,500 tax payer funded grant, went towards the 20lb fat vests as part of an “Experimental Empathy Exercise” so “non-obese” students can experience what it is like for someone who struggles with weight problems, according to The Washington Free Beacon.
Devon Golem, a NMSU professor of human nutrition in the Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, is participating in the experiment, and provides a firsthand account of her experiences wearing the fat vest on the NMSU website.
“I wore the mock fat vest while I engaged in my typical routine of exercise, work and errands,” wrote Golem. “I was self-conscious about my appearance in my workout clothes and noticed a couple of passers-by staring. I was sweating much more than normal and was out of breath.”
“Eating my lunch outside: As I was heading down the stairs, I recognized that I was having thoughts about not wanting to take the effort to go back up them after lunch,” Golem writes. “The campus was fairly desolate this Saturday, so I ate in peace, but I knew I was anxious about seeing people and concerned that I would be judged while eating. A couple of people passed, but paid no attention.”
The gel vests—meant to concentrate the weight around the wearers midsection for 12 consecutive hours—are part of an effort to combat the reported 60 percent increase in weight prejudice over the last decade, which the USDA says paralells rates of race and gender discrimination.
University gets federal grant for fat vests, 'weight sensitivity training' (Campus Reform)