BACKGROUND: The problem of obesity is now epidemic in the United States. Despite the existence of clinical guidelines for prevention and treatment of obesity and documented clinician concern about this problem, counseling for obesity reduction in primary care is infrequent. The principal aim of this study was to examine the views of clinicians on obesity counseling and to compare these views to the recommendations of leading obesity guidelines. METHODS: Twenty individual, in-depth interviews and two focus groups of clinicians serving predominantly low-income minority populations were conducted in a practice-based research network. Data were analyzed using immersion/crystallization and template approaches. RESULTS: Clinicians believe obesity is an important problem and report using mostly brief, targeted, low-intensity counseling in the face of limited patient motivation and lack of resources to support weight loss. They view family, cultural, social, and community factors as central to the problem of obesity, and their own efforts as generally ineffective. These clinicians similarly were unconvinced of the long-term effectiveness of any weight-loss strategies. CONCLUSIONS: Low levels of obesity counseling in primary care may reflect clinicians' self-assessment of their ineffectiveness in this area rather than lack of interest or knowledge. These clinicians perceive that obesity control efforts aimed at local community factors and environmental modifications are key strategies in augmenting and linking their efforts to successful outcomes.
BACKGROUND: The problem of obesity is now epidemic in the United States. Despite the existence of clinical guidelines for prevention and treatment of obesity and documented clinician concern about this problem, counseling for obesity reduction in primary care is infrequent. The principal aim of this study was to examine the views of clinicians on obesity counseling and to compare these views to the recommendations of leading obesity guidelines. METHODS: Twenty individual, in-depth interviews and two focus groups of clinicians serving predominantly low-income minority populations were conducted in a practice-based research network. Data were analyzed using immersion/crystallization and template approaches. RESULTS: Clinicians believe obesity is an important problem and report using mostly brief, targeted, low-intensity counseling in the face of limited patient motivation and lack of resources to support weight loss. They view family, cultural, social, and community factors as central to the problem of obesity, and their own efforts as generally ineffective. These clinicians similarly were unconvinced of the long-term effectiveness of any weight-loss strategies. CONCLUSIONS: Low levels of obesity counseling in primary care may reflect clinicians' self-assessment of their ineffectiveness in this area rather than lack of interest or knowledge. These clinicians perceive that obesity control efforts aimed at local community factors and environmental modifications are key strategies in augmenting and linking their efforts to successful outcomes.
Authors: Virginia A Reed; Karen E Schifferdecker; Michael E Rezaee; Sharon O'Connor; Robin J Larson Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2011-07-30 Impact factor: 5.128
Authors: Jodie Asselin; Eniola Salami; Adedayo M Osunlana; Ayodele A Ogunleye; Andrew Cave; Jeffrey A Johnson; Arya M Sharma; Denise L Campbell-Scherer Journal: CMAJ Open Date: 2017-04-26
Authors: Dylan D Thomas; Molly E Waring; Omid Ameli; Joel I Reisman; Varsha G Vimalananda Journal: Obesity (Silver Spring) Date: 2019-05-15 Impact factor: 5.002
Authors: May Nawal Lutfiyya; Bill Nika; Lauren Ng; Christina Tragos; Regina Won; Martin S Lipsky Journal: J Gen Intern Med Date: 2008-03-19 Impact factor: 5.128