| Literature DB >> 32385580 |
Paolo Sbraccia1, Luca Busetto2, Ferruccio Santini3, Mariarosaria Mancuso4, Paolo Nicoziani4, Antonio Nicolucci5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Despite the increasing prevalence of obesity in Italy, it remains largely underdiagnosed and undertreated. We aimed to identify the perceptions, attitudes, behaviours and barriers to effective obesity care among people with obesity (PwO) and healthcare professionals (HCPs) in Italy.Entities:
Keywords: Attitude; Healthcare professionals; Italy; Obesity; Obesity care; Perception
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32385580 PMCID: PMC8004527 DOI: 10.1007/s40519-020-00907-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eat Weight Disord ISSN: 1124-4909 Impact factor: 4.652
Sample demographics and characteristics
| PwO ( | HCPs ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Mean age, years (range) | 47 (18–88) | 55 (31–72) |
| Gender | ||
| Male | 679 (45%) | 232 (77%) |
| Female | 821 (55%) | 70 (23%) |
| Other | 1 (< 1%) | 0 (0%) |
| BMI classification | ||
| Respondents | 1501 (100%) | 259 (86%) |
| Underweight or healthy range (< 25 kg/m2) | 0 (0%) | 148 (57%) |
| Overweight (25–29.9 kg/m2) | 0 (0%) | 94 (36%) |
| Obesity class I (30–34.9 kg/m2) | 1021 (70%) | 10 (4%) |
| Obesity class II (35–39.9 kg/m2) | 278 (17%) | 2 (1%) |
| Obesity class III (≥ 40 kg/m2) | 202 (12%) | 5 (2%) |
| Number of comorbidities | ||
| 0 | 480 (25%) | |
| 1 | 374 (24%) | |
| 2 | 291 (22%) | |
| 3 | 185 (15%) | |
| ≥ 4 | 171 (14%) | |
| HCP category | ||
| PCP | 152 (50%) | |
| Specialist | 150 (50%) | |
| Diabetologist/endocrinologist | 26 (9%) | |
| Cardiologist | 80 (27%) | |
| Internal medicine (non-PCP) | 27 (9%) | |
| Nutritionist | 3 (1%) | |
| Other | 14 (5%) | |
| Obesity specialista | ||
| Yes | 205 (68%) | |
| No | 97 (32%) | |
All N sizes for PwO are from unweighted data. Demographic percentages (age, gender) also are from unweighted data. All non-demographic percentage results are for PwO weighted data. HCP data was not weighted; therefore, N sizes and percentages are all unweighted data
BMI body mass index, HCP healthcare professional, PCP primary care physician, PwO people with obesity
aA physician who meets at least one of the following criteria: at least 50% of their patients are seen for obesity/weight management, or has advanced/formal training in the treatment of obesity/weight management beyond medical school, or considers themselves to be an expert in obesity/weight loss management, or works in an obesity service clinic
Fig. 1PwO and HCP agreement with statements regarding attitudes towards obesity, rated on a scale of 1–5. HCPs = grey; PwO = blue. HCP healthcare professional, PwO people with obesity
Fig. 2Weight loss attempts and maintenance. PwO extent and maintenance of weight loss in the past 3 years at a threshold of (a) 5% or (b) 10% of total body weight. PwO people with obesity
Fig. 3Attitudes towards weight management conversations. a Proportion of PwO having weight management discussions, obesity diagnoses, and follow-up appointments/calls with HCPs. b Time between first struggle with weight and having a weight management conversation with HCPs. c Proportion of PwO who like or would like their HCP to initiate weight discussions during appointments. d Feelings of PwO following weight discussions with an HCP. HCP healthcare professional, PwO people with obesity
Fig. 4Most important weight management goals to personally achieve by PwO. PwO people with obesity
Fig. 5Effective long-term weight management recommendations by HCP. HCP healthcare professional
Fig. 6Reasons for not discussing weight with an HCP (PwO, blue) or patient (HCPs, grey); reasons with at least 10% difference between PwO and HCPs are above the dotted line, all others are below the dotted line. Respondents selected their top 5 reasons from the list of options. HCP healthcare professional, PwO people with obesity