| Literature DB >> 30744122 |
Shawna Pfeifflé1, Fabien Pellegrino2, Maaike Kruseman3, Claire Pijollet4, Magali Volery5, Ludivine Soguel6, Sophie Bucher Della Torre7.
Abstract
Nutritional management is an important component of the treatment of pediatric overweight and obesity, but clinicians struggle to keep abreast with the abundant literature. Therefore, our aim is to provide a tool that integrates the current recommendations and clinical expertise to assist dietitians and other practitioners in their decision making about the nutritional management of pediatric overweight and obesity. To construct this practice-based evidence-informed framework, we conducted a systematic review of the guidelines on nutritional management of pediatric overweight or obesity in 2 databases and in the grey literature. We analyzed and synthesized recommendations of 17 guidelines. We selected the recommendations that were common to at least 30% of the guidelines and added by consensus the recommendations relevant to clinical expertise. Finally, we structured the framework according to the Nutritional Care Process in collaboration with a specialized team of dietitians who assessed its validity in clinical practice. The framework contributes to facilitate the integration of evidence-based practice for dietitians by synthesizing the current evidence, supporting clinical expertise, and promoting structured care following Nutrition Care Process model for children and adolescents with obesity.Entities:
Keywords: evidence-based practice; nutritional management; pediatric obesity; structured framework
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30744122 PMCID: PMC6412470 DOI: 10.3390/nu11020362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717
Databases and research equations for the systematic review of guidelines on nutritional management of pediatric overweight or obesity.
| Database | Search Terms or Search Equation |
|---|---|
| Medline via PubMed | (terms in all fields): ((pediatric AND obesity) OR (pediatric obesity) OR (obesity AND child)) AND (guideline OR algorithms OR evidence-based medicine) AND (diet therapy OR nutrition therapy OR case management OR patient care management OR dietetics/education); filters: 10 years, Humans, Child: birth-18 years. |
| The Cochrane Library | pediatric obesity, pediatric obesity guidelines and treatment, obesity. |
| Grey literature research (Google, Bing) | guidelines, pediatric/childhood obesity, nutritional management, algorithm, the name of the country (Australia, Canada, Scotland, United States, France, Italy, New-Zealand, United Kingdom), the name of the scientific society (Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, American Academy of Pediatrics, Canadian Medical Association, European Association for the Study of Obesity, Haute Autorité de Santé, Institute for Clinical Systems Improvement, Institute for Healthy Childhood Weight, Institut National d’Excellence en Santé et Services sociaux, National Health and Medical Research Council, National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, New Zealand Ministry of Health, Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network, Società Italiana di Pediatrica, The Endocrine Society). |
Recommendations regarding nutritional assessment, diagnosis, intervention and monitoring and evaluation, frequency of citation and references of the 17 included guidelines.
| Theme | Recommendation | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| |||
| Food/Nutrition-related history | Assess eating patterns | 13 | [ |
| Assess food quality and quantity (including portion sizes and overeating) | 7 | [ | |
| Assess the presence of sugar-sweetened beverages and juices | 7 | [ | |
| Assess meals structure and distribution | 7 | [ | |
| Assess meals context and environment | 6 | [ | |
| Assess the presence of snacking | 3 | [ | |
| Anthropometric measurements | Calculate BMI | 13 | [ |
| Analyze growth curves | 11 | [ | |
| Assess the factors conducting to a weight gain | 2 | [ | |
| Assess the precocity of the adiposity rebound | 1 | [ | |
| Biochemical data, medical tests and procedures | Interpret of blood pressure | 10 | [ |
| Interpret of blood lipids | 10 | [ | |
| Analyze blood glucose | 9 | [ | |
| Assess hepatic tests | 7 | [ | |
| Nutrition-focused physical findings | Assess the presence of acanthosis nigricans | 7 | [ |
| Assess sleep | 6 | [ | |
| Assess food sensations | 1 | [ | |
| Physical activity | Assess physical activity level | 12 | [ |
| Assess sedentary behaviors (especially the screen time) | 11 | [ | |
| Client history | Assess comorbidities | 11 | [ |
| Assess family history | 12 | [ | |
| Assess mental health | 8 | [ | |
| Assess social/family environment | 8 | [ | |
| Assess parental feeding practices (restrictive, permissive, pressure to eat, food as reward) | 3 | [ | |
| Eating Disorders screening | Screen for eating disorders | 9 | [ |
| Assess the presence of Binge Eating Disorders | 5 | [ | |
| Change motivation | Assess motivation and readiness to change | 9 | [ |
|
| |||
| No guideline referred to nutritional diagnosis. | 0 | ||
|
| |||
| Meal structure | Structure eating with 3 meals and 2 snacks per day | 5 | [ |
| Avoid snacking | 3 | [ | |
| Food balance | Promote fruit and vegetable consumption | 7 | [ |
| Balance diet and eating habits | 6 | [ | |
| Avoid high energy density and low nutritional density foods (fast-foods, take-out, sugar sweetened beverages and juices) | 5 | [ | |
| Do not forbid any food | 3 | [ | |
| Avoid sugar sweetened beverages and juices | 4 | [ | |
| Limit sugar sweetened beverages and juices consumption | 3 | [ | |
| Portion sizes | Follow national recommendations | 4 | [ |
| Diets | Avoid any type of restrictive diet | 8 | [ |
| Follow the “stop/traffic light diet” (The traffic light diet divides food groups into 3 categories: green (low-energy, high-nutrient foods, may be eaten often), yellow (moderate-energy foods, may be eaten in moderation), and red (high-energy, low-nutrient foods, should be eaten sparingly). [ | 4 | [ | |
| Meal environment | Eat as a family | 6 | [ |
| Avoid screen during meals | 3 | [ | |
| Offer healthy foods at home | 1 | [ | |
| Food sensations | Work on the recognition and respect of the food sensations | 6 | [ |
| Family implication | Families should be included in the treatment | 14 | [ |
| Family behavior should not be different than the child with excess weight to avoid stigmatization | 8 | [ | |
| Lifestyle intervention | Multifactorial treatment including the food balance, the physical activity and the behavior management | 10 | [ |
| Physical activity | At least 60 min of moderate to vigorous activity per day (at least 10 min per session) | 10 | [ |
| Importance of the child’s choice and pleasure in the activity | 8 | [ | |
| Sedentarity | Reduce non-academic screen time to max. 2 h both in week days and weekend days | 8 | [ |
| Behavior management | Practice | 8 | [ |
| Use motivational counseling | 8 | [ | |
| Set | 8 | [ | |
| Introduce behavior and objectives self-monitoring | 7 | [ | |
| Care coordination and implication | Dietitian | 7 | [ |
| Pediatrician | 6 | [ | |
| Other professionals | Details in | ||
| Interdisciplinary teams | 3 | [ | |
| Pharmacotherapy | Recommend to use | 11 | [ |
| Bariatric surgery | In general, not recommended. Indications and contraindications were different between guidelines. | Details in | |
| Comorbidities | Consider comorbidities during the intervention | 9 | [ |
|
| |||
| Follow-up | Individual or group follow-up depending on the child’s situation | 2 | [ |
| Long-term follow-up | 4 | [ | |
| Monitoring indicators | Monitor anthropometric measurements | 10 | [ |
| Monitor food balance and physical activity | 4 | [ | |
| Monitor changes according to the objectives | 1 | [ | |
| Weight management | Weight stabilization for growing children | 7 | [ |
Figure 1Structured framework on the nutritional management of overweight and obesity in children and adolescents.