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Obesity in Adults: A 2022 Adapted Clinical Practice Guideline for Ireland

Authors :
Cathy Breen
Jean O’Connell
Justin Geoghegan
Donal O’Shea
Susie Birney
Louise Tully
Karen Gaynor
Mark O’Kelly
Grace O’Malley
Clare O’Donovan
Oonagh Lyons
Mary Flynn
Suzanne Allen
Niamh Arthurs
Sarah Browne
Molly Byrne
Shauna Callaghan
Chris Collins
Aoife Courtney
Michael Crotty
Ciara Donohue
Caroline Donovan
Colin Dunlevy
Diarmuid Duggan
Naomi Fearon
Francis Finucane
Ita Fitzgerald
Siobhan Foy
John Garvey
Irene Gibson
Liam Glynn
Edward Gregg
Anne Griffin
Janas M. Harrington
Caroline Heary
Helen Heneghan
Andrew Hogan
Mary Hynes
Claire Kearney
Dervla Kelly
Karl Neff
Carel W. le Roux
Sean Manning
Fionnuala McAuliffe
Susan Moore
Niamh Moran
Maura Murphy
Celine Murrin
Sarah M. O’Brien
Caitríona O’Donnell
Sarah O’Dwyer
Cara O’Grada
Emer O’Malley
Orlaith O’Reilly
Sharleen O’Reilly
Olivia Porter
Helen M. Roche
Amanda Rhynehart
Leona Ryan
Suzanne Seery
Corina Soare
Ferrah Shaamile
Abigail Walsh
Catherine Woods
Conor Woods
Ruth Yoder
Source :
Obesity Facts. 15:736-752
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
S. Karger AG, 2022.

Abstract

Background: This Clinical Practice Guideline (CPG) for the management of obesity in adults in Ireland, adapted from the Canadian CPG, defines obesity as a complex chronic disease characterised by excess or dysfunctional adiposity that impairs health. The guideline reflects substantial advances in the understanding of the determinants, pathophysiology, assessment, and treatment of obesity. Summary: It shifts the focus of obesity management toward improving patient-centred health outcomes, functional outcomes, and social and economic participation, rather than weight loss alone. It gives recommendations for care that are underpinned by evidence-based principles of chronic disease management; validate patients’ lived experiences; move beyond simplistic approaches of “eat less, move more” and address the root drivers of obesity. Key Messages: People living with obesity face substantial bias and stigma, which contribute to increased morbidity and mortality independent of body weight. Education is needed for all healthcare professionals in Ireland to address the gap in skills, increase knowledge of evidence-based practice, and eliminate bias and stigma in healthcare settings. We call for people living with obesity in Ireland to have access to evidence-informed care, including medical, medical nutrition therapy, physical activity and physical rehabilitation interventions, psychological interventions, pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery. This can be best achieved by resourcing and fully implementing the Model of Care for the Management of Adult Overweight and Obesity. To address health inequalities, we also call for the inclusion of obesity in the Structured Chronic Disease Management Programme and for pharmacotherapy reimbursement, to ensure equal access to treatment based on health-need rather than ability to pay.

Details

ISSN :
16624033 and 16624025
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Obesity Facts
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f607534cfacf3c79e54aea10e885e55
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1159/000527131