| Literature DB >> 28620503 |
Jennifer E O'Donnell1, Rachel Foskett-Tharby1, Paramjit S Gill1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To explore general practice staff views of managing childhood obesity in primary care.Entities:
Keywords: adolescence; family practice; general practitioner; obesity; primary health care; qualitative research
Year: 2017 PMID: 28620503 PMCID: PMC5464385 DOI: 10.1177/2054270417693966
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JRSM Open ISSN: 2054-2704
Target number of practices in each recruitment strata and the number of practices actually recruited.
| IMD score | Practice list size | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Low (range 290 to 4562) | Medium (range 4563 to 8375) | High (range 8377 to 44,030) | ||
| Practice recruitment | ||||
| Low (range 0.61 to 14.97) | Actual recruitment | 2 | 3 | 2 |
| Planned recruitment | 3 | 4 | 5 | |
| Eligible practices | 664 | 848 | 925 | |
| Medium (range 14.98 to 30.77) | Actual recruitment | 4 | 5 | 4 |
| Planned recruitment | 3 | 4 | 4 | |
| Eligible practices | 753 | 806 | 873 | |
| High (range 30.78 to 82.00) | Actual recruitment | 6 | 4 | 3 |
| Planned recruitment | 4 | 4 | 3 | |
| Eligible practices | 1019 | 781 | 634 | |
Higher scores indicate greater levels of deprivation. IMD = Index of Multiple Deprivation.
Distribution of interviewed practices across PCRN and CCG areas.
| PCRN area | CCG |
|---|---|
| Central England | NHS Birmingham Crosscity CCG |
| NHS Sandwell and West Birmingham CCG | |
| NHS Birmingham South and Central CCG | |
| NHS Walsall CCG | |
| East of England | NHS Great Yarmouth and Waveney CCG |
| NHS Cambridgeshire and Peterborough CCG | |
| South East | NHS Oxfordshire CCG |
| NHS Bedfordshire CCG | |
| South West | NHS Northern, Eastern and Western Devon CCG |
| NHS Somerset CCG | |
| NHS Bristol CCG | |
| NHS Bath And North East Somerset CCG | |
| North West | NHS Cumbria CCG |
| NHS Stockport CCG | |
| NHS Oldham CCG | |
| NHS Liverpool CCG | |
| Northern and Yorkshire | NHS Durham Dales, Easington and Sedgefield CCG |
PCRN = Primary Care Research Network; CCG = Clinical Commissioning Group; NHS = National Health Service.
Demographic characteristics of general practice staff interviewed.
| Staff role | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GP | Practice nurse | Practice manager | Healthcare assistant | Other admin staff | Total staff | |
| Total interviewed, | 29 (56) | 7 (13) | 14 (27) | 1 (2) | 1 (2) | 52 |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 21 (72) | 0 (0) | 2 (14) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 23 (44) |
| Female | 8 (28) | 7 (100) | 12 (86) | 1 (100) | 1 (100) | 29 (56) |
| Years since qualified[ | ||||||
| ≤ 5 | 0 | |||||
| 6–10 | 2 | |||||
| 11–20 | 8 | |||||
| 21–30 | 14 | |||||
| 31–40 | 4 | |||||
| 41–50 | 1 | |||||
GP = general practitioner.
aThese data were collected for general practitioners only.
Lack of contact with well children.
| “The main barrier is seeing the children, there’s a huge spell between the ages of 5 and adulthood where we don’t see children, they just don’t come to their Doctor … I don’t think we can practically do it, they are a healthy group and we generally only see the children with chronic health issues.” Practice ID 2, GP “What you’re needing is an opportunity to contact this group, because these children are usually healthy. So they are coming to the surgery when they have got some minor respiratory infection or maybe some other reason. That way you can pick it up, but you’re picking up on only a tiny segment of that problem … If you are taking only 10 to 15% of this group of patients, where is that going to lead onto? You’re not achieving much.” Practice ID 19, GP |
Lack of contact with well children.
| “They wouldn’t come in specifically for obesity in which case it’s then quite difficult to bring up obesity. And the time factor as well, the ten minute obviously limits how much you can ask or talk about.” Practice ID 12, GP “On the very rare occasions when you do see them rather than following their agenda to help build up a relationship … let’s just check your weight while you’re here.” Practice ID 4, GP |
Lack of contact with well children.
| “It’s very easy to line a classroom full of kids and weigh them all whereas for those 30 kids going to the GP it might not happen over six years.” Practice ID 10, GP “These kids are being seen by school nurses anyway, so I’m not sure there’s a huge amount of additional benefit to us doing it in addition to the schools doing it … it’s a school problem, because that’s where these kids are.” Practice ID 8, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “No. As a general rule you have to mention it. No, I can’t remember the last time a parent brought it up, ‘I think my child’s a bit overweight. Can we do something about it, please?’ No.” Practice ID 24, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “Often you’re dealing with parents, not the children, if you stick a bar of chocolate in their lunch box every day, and give them crisps and pizza for tea, then the children are going to end up overweight … It’s up to parents making good choices about what they buy, what they put in their fridge, and what they put in their kid’s lunch boxes. So I think there’s lots of needs for parental education.” Practice ID 26, GP “Some families can’t afford healthy food. They can’t afford food waste. So they won’t buy fresh fruit or vegetables, if they’re gonna go off, because they’re expensive. So that’s a real issue we’ve discussed locally, that sometimes they just won’t buy it because if the children don’t eat it, it’s a waste of money.” Practice ID 13, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “From a personal perspective I’ve seen a lot of young people who were quite chubby growing up who as soon as they hit puberty they changed.” Practice ID 9, Practice Nurse “You’ll notice that they’re a bit overweight or quite overweight, and Mum’s reaction is, ‘He’s fine; he’s healthy. He’s healthy looking.’ And that’s not unusual. It was quite off-putting actually, to hear it. And I had to say, ‘No. This is not healthy. He’s actually obese.’ Practice ID 18, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “It's an incredibly delicate conversation with parents, particularly mothers, because there's an awful lot who come up about weight themselves. It's harder than telling an adult that their weight is a problem. If you tell them that their child's weight is a problem that's a very pejorative thing to say to a parent and I think it's a very difficult conversation to have.” Practice ID 29, GP “Nobody likes to be criticised, no one likes to be critical … any suggestion you’re a bad parent, you just don’t want to go there. Even though it isn’t necessarily about parenting, clearly you know, the major intervention is altering the parental approach, to the child’s typical levels of feeding. That’s not to say that they’re bad parents but it always comes over as such and it’s a real minefield.” Practice ID 22, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “It’s a slightly awkward one to have in front of the child, because you don’t know whether the child perceives themselves as being overweight. Or they have already experienced some kind of bullying, or issues at school around peer groups, around their weight, and then to be told by the doctor, well, you know, that your child’s looking a bit overweight.” Practice ID 26, GP |
Sensitivity of the issue.
| “I’d be concerned about a one size fits all approach to it, where every child or teenager had to have their weight done, because you’ve got to think of the people with the other way round, which is as much of an issue for some teenagers, and lots of them I try to avoid … Well, just because of the anorexia thing, getting obsessed with weight, oh, the doctor’s weighing me. You’ve got to look at everyone individually, I think” Practice ID 20, GP |
The potential impact of general practice.
| “As a health care professional, what you think is that if somebody has got a problem, you have to deal with it and you need to see a very good outcome, so for me, as a GP what makes me happy is – he had a problem, diabetes, diagnose it, start treatment, got better! that’s the outcome. You have got obese child, you’ve got nothing to do with it, it’s parents’ jobs – you can’t prescribe anything, you can’t tell them anything and for me, the outcome is frustration – nothing else.” Practice ID 16, GP “My concern about obesity in general practice is it seems to imply that the solution in obesity is in general practice. And it is absolutely clear that the solution is nowhere near general practice. The solution to obesity is in public health; nothing to do with general practice.” Practice ID 25, GP |
The potential impact of general practice.
| “We may bring in fit and well kids in here, they’re going to school, they’ve got school nurses why not let them do it and let us deal with the self harmers and the kids with behavioural problems and the parents who want their child assessed if they’ve got autism or ADHD, never mind the kids who are being abused and identifying them.” Practice ID 28, GP “I don’t think we’ve got the infrastructure, in terms of the services at all. I don’t think the services are really geared up to deal with it.” Practice ID 3, GP “We can refer, there are childhood services. I know there’s something in the community that does overweight or obese children. I can’t remember, I’ve never had to refer anyone to it … But certainly a clear pathway needs to be drawn up … we should have involvement in it and we should know what our pathway is. It should be fairly simple, and we need to make sure that the people that we are meant to be referring to or the plan of the referral is very clear, explicit and we have it in place before we put out something like this and say ‘now start picking up your childhood obese patients’.” Practice ID 9, GP |