| Literature DB >> 30805277 |
Kristina Walsh1, Carol Grech1, Kathy Hill1.
Abstract
Health advice for overweight patients in primary care has been a focus of obesity guidelines. Primary care doctors and nurses are well placed to provide evidence based preventive health advice. This literature review addressed two research questions: 'When do primary care doctors and nurses provide health advice for weight management?' and 'What health advice is provided to overweight patients in primary care settings?' The study was conducted in the first half of 2018 and followed Arksey and O'Malley (2005) five stage framework to conduct a comprehensive scoping review. The following databases were searched: Emcare, Ovid, Embase, The Cochrane library, Proquest family health, Health source (nursing academic), Joanna Briggs Institute EBP database, Medline, PubMed, Rural and remote, Proquest (nursing and allied health) and TRIP using search term parameters. Two hundred and forty-eight (248) articles were located and screened by two reviewers. Twenty-three research papers met the criteria and data were analysed using a content analysis method. The results show that primary care doctors and nurses are more likely to give advice as BMI increases and often miss opportunities to discuss weight with overweight patients. Body Mass Index (BMI) is often wrongly categorised as overweight, when in fact it is in the range of obese, or not recorded and when health advice is given, it can be of poor quality. Few studies on this topic included people under 40 years, practice nurses as the focus and those with a BMI of 25-29.9 without a risk factor. A 'toolkit' approach to improve advice and adherence to evidence based guidelines should be explored in future research.Entities:
Keywords: BMI; GP; General practitioner; Health advice; Health prevention; Nurse; Obese; Overweight; Practice nurse; Primary care
Year: 2019 PMID: 30805277 PMCID: PMC6374522 DOI: 10.1016/j.pmedr.2019.01.016
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Prev Med Rep ISSN: 2211-3355
Fig. 1Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
Fig. 2Modified PRISMA flow chart.
Fig. 3Data extraction tool.
Summary table.
| NUMBER/author/year | Location/design/sample | Objective | Theoretical framework | When was health advice given | What health advice was given | Findings | Strengths/weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | USA | To see if physician weight loss advice results in a change to patient dietary intake, physical activity and weight. | Not explicit. | In 63% of encounters of either overweight or obese, BMI 25>. | Nutrition: 9 subcategories. | Combined advice in 34% | Strengths: |
| 2. | Netherlands | To investigate lifestyle interactions by nurse practitioners compared with general practitioners | Groningen Overweight and Lifestyle (GOAL) Intervention. | BMI 25> | Based on national and international guidelines. | >80% satisfaction that healthy eating and physical activity was useful by the NP. | Weakness: Self report, relies on patient recall. |
| 3. | Canada | To assess patient perceptions of preventive lifestyle counselling in Primary care practice. (Shortly after dieticians joined the family health network and 1 year later). | Not explicit. | Not discussed. | Verbal advice and pamphlets were the most common. Verbal advice 61% initially and 78% 1 year later. | Overall rate of diet counselling 37%, exercise counselling 24%. | Weakness: |
| 4. | USA | To examine the prevalence and predictors of health care professionals recommendations to lose weight. | Not explicit. | In those ‘overweight with risks’ 19.8% | Not reported | 70% of participants met the weight loss criteria but only 36% received advice to lose weight in the past year. | Weakness: |
| 5. | USA | To examine patient characteristics, physician characteristics and characteristics of the physician/patient relationship associated with weight loss counselling and recommendations provided by physicians. | Not explicit. | Higher BMI was associated with more frequent weight loss counselling, p < 0.001. | Not reported. | A greater number of medical conditions was related to more frequent weight loss counselling, p < 0.05. | Weaknesses: |
| 6. | Rural QLD, Australia | To determine whether rural GP's use physical activity as a weight loss strategy and if so, how? | Not reported. | 16 GP practices reported referring to gyms or fitness classes | 16 GP practices cited motivation and commitment, lack of local facilities and lack of footpaths as barriers to physical activity (relating to rural areas) | Weaknesses: | |
| 7. | USA | To examine the effectiveness of teachable moments to increase patients' recall of advice, motivation to modify behaviour, and behaviour change. | Health behaviour change. | BMI 25 and over with the presence of a chronic condition. | Not stated. | 86% had at least one opportunity for discussion. | Weaknesses: |
| 8. | USA | To examine the receipt of provider advice to lose weight among primary care patients who were overweight and obese. | Not explicit. | 59% of participants advised to lose weight. 41% had not received advice. | Not stated | Women were more likely than men to be advised to lose weight. | Self –reported may have led to patient recall bias. |
| 9. | Australia | To explore whether education and referral by GP's to patients with smoking, nutrition, alcohol, physical activity and weight (SNAPW) behavioural risk factors is tailored to patients risk and readiness to change. | ( | Those given dietary advice had mean BMI of 30.01, those not, mean BMI 27.76 | Those with higher BMI recorded were more likely to receive a referral for dietary or physical activity than those with lower BMI score. | High prevalence of behavioural risk factors in diet and physical activity. Diet 72.6% physical activity 57.6%. | Self –reported, potential recall bias. |
| 10. | Australia Qualitative cross sectional survey. | To report perceptions, practices and knowledge of nurses about providing healthy lifestyle advice for patients who may be overweight or obese and compare responses from demographic regions. | Not explicit. | 28% measure height and weight | Quality of weight loss advice was not attainable. | 74% of nurses provided dietary advice. | Weaknesses: |
| 11. | Finland | To identify overweight and obese with increased cardiovascular risk in the community and provide with lifestyle counselling that is possible to implement in real life. | Not explicit. | BMI 25 and over | Aim to reduce weight by 5% by reducing saturated fat and increasing physical activity to at least 30 mins per day or 4 h per week. | By targeted screening it is possible to find overweight and obese people at increased cardiovascular risk, to induce clinically meaningful, long –term, weight loss or stabilisation in primary care. | Weaknesses: |
| 12. | Netherlands | To review literature on relative effectiveness of face to face communication related behaviour change techniques provided in primary care by either physicians or nurse to intervene on patients' lifestyle behaviour. | Reference to Prochaska and Di Clemente's trans theoretical model of behavioural change and Bandura's social cognitive theory. | No difference shown between GP's and nurses' however, few studies include both so caution must be exercised. | Behavioural counselling, motivational interviewing, education and advice are most frequently evaluated as effective face to face communication related BCT's | One primary care professional does not seem better equipped that another to provide face to face related BCT's. | Strengths: |
| 13. | USA | To analyse time spent on the topic of weight and whether motivational interviewing was used. | Nutritional advice was given on 78% | Not stated. | Mean time of 3.3 min was spent addressing the topic. | Weaknesses: | |
| 14. | Australia QLD Qualitative1261 participants | To ascertain the extent to which general practitioners in Queensland recommend physical activity to their patients, the types of patients they target, types of activity they suggest and how patients respond to the recommendations. | Not explicit. | GP's recommended 81% | 75% were advised to walk | Obese were most likely to be recommended to do more exercise 34%, followed by overweight 15%, acceptable weight 7%, and underweight 4%. | Weaknesses: |
| 15. | USA Qualitative 30 P.C. physicians, nurses, assistants from | To use qualitative methods to explore how clinicians approach weight counselling, including who, how, what, and what referrals. | Not explicit. | Addressed with all, rapport first, chronic consults, unwritten protocol when to address it, when doing vitals | Specific diets, walking common, increase activity | Overwhelming majority have no external resources or behavioural treatments, e.g. dietician, classes, programmes. | Weaknesses: |
| 16. | USA Comprehensive review of articles | To provide a practical approach to managing overweight and obese adult patients based on data from research and recommendations from established guidelines. | Not explicit. | It should be addressed when BMI is calculated and a diagnosis of overweight or obese is given. | Advice should be: | Nurse practitioners can easily integrate simple, safe, and effective weight management strategies into their practice. | |
| 17. | USA | To examine the reliability and validity of brief sedentary assessment tool for primary care. | 5 A's framework | During routine visits. | No specific advice noted. | Sedentary behaviour counselling practices are infrequent in primary care clinics. | Weaknesses: |
| 18. | USA | To investigate the effects of a simple visual prompts poster on occurrence of patient/physician weight loss conversation. | 5 A's framework | When patients brought weight up or when GP brought weight up. Not very clear. | Not stated. | 42% reported interest in weight loss but did not discuss it with the physician. | Weaknesses: |
| 19. | Germany Cross sectional study with 12 GP practices. | To analyse GP encounters with overweight and obese patients. To test whether patients with a BMI 30 or over had longer consultations relating to lifestyle, nutrition and physical activity than those with a BMI under 30. | Not explicit. | Not clear. During biennial checks of over 35 year olds. | Not stated. | 78% of dialogues were between 0 and 6.76 min. | Weaknesses: |
| 20. | Netherlands. Quantitative. | To compare structured lifestyle counselling by nurse practitioners with usual care from GP. To see if results at 1 year were sustained at 3 years. | Not explicit. | BMI 25 or over with a co morbidity. | Not stated. | Preventing weight gain by Nurse practitioners did not lead to better results than GP's. | Strengths: |
| 21. | Netherlands Qualitative. Observational study. 19 practice nurses | To examine the content of Dutch practice nurses' advices about weight, nutrition and physical activity to overweight and obese patients. | Not explicit. | PN initiated/PT initiated. | To lose weight. Reduce fat, salt, sugar, alcohol, increase fruit. | Majority of advice based on guidelines, type II diabetes in particular. | Weaknesses: |
| 22. | USA | To examine overweight and obesity management in primary care in relation to Body Mass Index, documentation of weight status, and comorbidities | Not explicit: | The higher the BMI the more likely to have weight status and intervention documented | Behavioural interventions. | Documentation of OW/obesity was associated with higher odds of advice to lose weight among OW compared with mild/moderate/severe obesity. | Weaknesses: |
| 23. | Australia | To determine extent that Australian GP's recognise overweight and obese patients. | Not explicit. | Not discussed. | Not discussed. | Males without hypertension or type II diabetes had higher odds of not being identified. |