Literature DB >> 22433615

Importance of age for 3-year continuous behavioral obesity treatment success and dropout rate.

Pernilla Danielsson1, Viktoria Svensson, Jan Kowalski, Gisela Nyberg, Orjan Ekblom, Claude Marcus.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess whether first year weight loss, age, and socioeconomic background correlate with the success rate of continuous long-term behavioral obesity treatment.
METHODS: In a 3-year longitudinal study, obese children (n = 684) were divided into three groups based on age at the start of treatment, age 6-9 years, 10-13 years, and 14-16 years.
RESULTS: The mean BMI standard deviation score (BMI-SDS) decline was age-dependent (p = 0.001), independently of adjustment for missing data: -1.8 BMI-SDS units in the youngest, -1.3 in the middle age group, and -0.5 in the oldest age group. SES and parental BMI status did not affect the results. 30% of the adolescents remained in treatment at year 3. There was only a weak correlation between BMI-SDS change after 1 and 3 years: r = 0.51 (p < 0.001). Among children with no BMI-SDS reduction during year 1 (n = 46), 40% had a clinically significantly reduced BMI-SDS after year 3.
CONCLUSION: Behavioral treatment should be initiated at an early age to increase the chance for good results. Childhood obesity treatment should be continued for at least 3 years, regardless of the initial change in BMI-SDS.
Copyright © 2012 S. Karger GmbH, Freiburg.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22433615     DOI: 10.1159/000336060

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Obes Facts        ISSN: 1662-4025            Impact factor:   3.942


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