| Literature DB >> 35623624 |
Toni McAloon1, Vivien Coates2, Donna Fitzsimons3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Escalating levels of obesity place enormous and growing demands on Health care provision in the (U.K.) United Kingdom. Resources are limited with increasing and competing demands upon them. Ethical considerations underpin clinical decision making generally, but there is limited evidence regarding the relationship between these variables particularly in terms of treating individuals with obesity. RESEARCH AIM: To investigate the views of National Health Service (NHS) clinicians on navigating the ethical challenges and decision making associated with obesity management in adults with chronic illness. RESEARCHEntities:
Keywords: Obesity management; equity; multi-professional; rights; utility
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35623624 PMCID: PMC9527366 DOI: 10.1177/09697330221075764
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Ethics ISSN: 0969-7330 Impact factor: 3.344
The demographic characteristics of the sample.
| Participant variable | n (%) |
|---|---|
| Gender ( | |
| Male | 83 (21) |
| Female | 309 (79) |
| Age range ( | |
| 18–28 | 134 (34) |
| 29–38 | 89 (23) |
| 39–48 | 102 (26) |
| 49–58 | 61 (15) |
| 59–68 | 9 (2) |
| Professional group
( | |
| Nurse | 138 (35) |
| Nursing student | 53 (13) |
| Doctor | 69 (17) |
| Medical student | 72 (18) |
| Dietitian | 26 (7) |
| Dietetic student | 7 (2) |
| Unknown | 30 (8) |
| Clinical experience
( | |
| Student | 132 (34) |
| Qualified: <5 years | 21 (6) |
| 5–10 years | 44 (11) |
| 11–15 years | 40 (10) |
| 16–20 years | 44 (11) |
| >20 years | 110 (28) |
| BMI levels ( | M = 25 kg/m2 (SD = 5.27) |
| Underweight (<18.50) | 11 (3%) |
| Normal weight (18.50–24.99) | 226 (58%) |
| Pre-obese (25–29.99) | 101 (26%) |
| Obese class 1 (30–34.99) | 38 (10%) |
| Obese class 11 (35–39.99) | 4 (1%) |
| Obese class 111 (>40) | 8 (2%) |
Abbreviations: BMI: body mass index; M: mean; SD: standard deviation; n: number of participants.
aSome missing data.
Qualitative Themes associated with obesity management.
| Theme | Subtheme |
|---|---|
| 1. Rationale for body weight | Underlying medical problem(s) |
| As a comorbidity | |
| A pharmacological side effect | |
| Mental health problems/self-harm | |
| Personal lifestyle/personal control | |
| Relationship between food companies and governments | |
| 2. Patient rights and responsibilities | Equity if attempting to change weight |
| Equitable treatment with other conditions | |
| Evidence of attempted weight loss needed | |
| Access to treatment requires taking responsibility | |
| Patient motivation to change needed | |
| Lack of fairness if obesity is unrelated to medical problem | |
| 3. Justification for treatment management | Not a HCP’s place to refuse treatment |
| Hippocratic oath requirement | |
| Role of HCP to assist patients with weight loss | |
| Refusal of treatment an incentive to lose weight | |
| Compliance/lack of compliance | |
| Lifesaving versus elective treatment | |
| Risks versus benefits | |
| Relevance to health care problem | |
| Prospect for weight loss | |
| Potential for desirable consequences | |
| Obese at greater risk | |
| Weight loss for safety | |
| Treatment may not be possible | |
| Impact on resources | |
| Disheartening for clinicians |
Figure 1.Respondent ranking of justifications for restriction of treatment options with patients with obesity.