The 3Ds - Discussion, diagnosis and direction: Elements for effective obesity care by healthcare professionals

Background: The care of people with obesity is often suboptimal due to both physician and patient perceptions about obesity itself and clinical barriers. Using data from the ACTION-IO study, we aimed to identify factors that might improve the quality of obesity care through adoption of the 3D approa...

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Autores: Alfadda, A.A. (Assim A.)|||/items/b1fa83d0-4a64-4c14-bf94-bae7da2dcce3, Caterson, I.D. (Ian D.)|||/items/05086b31-0d97-4d30-bf4b-2e0c252c2843, Coutinho, W. (Walmir)|||/items/43d861c7-a216-49cf-8b48-a308366ae5bf, Cuevas, A. (Ada)|||/items/d039f5d4-f959-4fe6-bd8c-fb3864ae2f7a, Dicker, D. (Dror)|||/items/1865c50d-6f0f-453f-bad1-5e016dfa4282, Halford, J.C.G. (Jason C. G.)|||/items/b7b4e39e-b449-4951-8ffa-2a5645bf880c, Hughes, C. (Carly)|||/items/e9156e69-d93a-4f75-a38a-aea53fb7d8b0, Iwabu, M. (Masato)|||/items/f9ba6d9e-6068-4eff-9de5-704f0f6d902d, Kang, J.H. (Jae Heon)|||/items/fa4355cb-1c99-4f45-a55b-2368ac98e896, Nawar, R. (Rita)|||/items/2bdd6608-7cc4-4e93-b776-c07c65ff086e, Reynoso, R. (Ricardo)|||/items/b8f16c47-f900-465b-b2d2-f3eadd8d7a48, Rhee, N. (Nicolai)|||/items/2781b52e-7fe1-4dd5-9c7b-54992d190b7d, Rigas, G. (Georgia)|||/items/51ebcf9e-fa6a-4fd0-85eb-04b49cac7c62, Salvador-Rodríguez, F.J. (Francisco Javier)|||/items/1175815b-412b-41a6-b91f-6dbfa349f9c8, Vázquez-Velázquez, V. (Verónica)|||/items/53c4506f-56e7-456b-8f71-ba206d8c8210, Sbraccia, P. (Paolo)|||/items/ff5be634-a5ae-4f06-9f4d-07e5da0ce223
Tipo de recurso: artículo
Fecha de publicación:2021
País:España
Institución:Universidad de Navarra
Repositorio:Dadun. Depósito Académico Digital de la Universidad de Navarra
Idioma:inglés
OAI Identifier:oai:dadun.unav.edu:10171/116014
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10171/116014
Access Level:acceso abierto
Palabra clave:ACTION-IO
International
Motivation
Obesity
Weight management
Descripción
Sumario:Background: The care of people with obesity is often suboptimal due to both physician and patient perceptions about obesity itself and clinical barriers. Using data from the ACTION-IO study, we aimed to identify factors that might improve the quality of obesity care through adoption of the 3D approach (Discussion, Diagnosis and Direction [follow-up]) by healthcare professionals (HCPs). Methods: An online survey was completed by HCPs in 11 countries. Exploratory beta regression analyses identified independent variables associated with each component of the 3D approach. Results: Data from 2,331 HCPs were included in the statistical models. HCPs were significantly more likely to initiate weight discussions and inform patients of obesity diagnoses, respectively, if (odds ratio [95% confidence interval]): they recorded an obesity diagnosis in their patient's medical notes (1.59, [1.43-1.76] and 2.16 [1.94-2.40], respectively); and they were comfortable discussing weight with their patients (1.53 [1.39-1.69] and 1.15 [1.04-1.27]). HCPs who reported feeling motivated to help their patients lose weight were also more likely to initiate discussions (1.36 [1.21-1.53]) and schedule follow-up appointments (1.21 [1.06-1.38]). By contrast, HCPs who lacked advanced formal training in obesity management were less likely to inform patients of obesity diagnoses (0.83 [0.74-0.92]) or schedule follow-up appointments (0.69 [0.62-0.78]). Conclusion: Specific actions that could improve obesity care through the 3D approach include: encouraging HCPs to record an obesity diagnosis; providing tools to help HCPs feel more comfortable initiating weight discussions; and provision of training in obesity management. Clinical trial registration: NCT03584191.