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Management of obesity: improvement of health-care training and systems for prevention and care
- Source :
- The Lancet. 385:2521-2533
- Publication Year :
- 2015
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2015.
-
Abstract
- Summary Although the caloric deficits achieved by increased awareness, policy, and environmental approaches have begun to achieve reductions in the prevalence of obesity in some countries, these approaches are insufficient to achieve weight loss in patients with severe obesity. Because the prevalence of obesity poses an enormous clinical burden, innovative treatment and care-delivery strategies are needed. Nonetheless, health professionals are poorly prepared to address obesity. In addition to biases and unfounded assumptions about patients with obesity, absence of training in behaviour-change strategies and scarce experience working within interprofessional teams impairs care of patients with obesity. Modalities available for the treatment of adult obesity include clinical counselling focused on diet, physical activity, and behaviour change, pharmacotherapy, and bariatric surgery. Few options, few published reports of treatment, and no large randomised trials are available for paediatric patients. Improved care for patients with obesity will need alignment of the intensity of therapy with the severity of disease and integration of therapy with environmental changes that reinforce clinical strategies. New treatment strategies, such as the use of technology and innovative means of health-care delivery that rely on health professionals other than physicians, represent promising options, particularly for patients with overweight and patients with mild to moderate obesity. The co-occurrence of undernutrition and obesity in low-income and middle-income countries poses unique challenges that might not be amenable to the same strategies as those that can be used in high-income countries.
- Subjects :
- Adult
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
medicine.medical_specialty
Attitude of Health Personnel
Bariatric Surgery
Comorbidity
Disease
Overweight
Public-Private Sector Partnerships
Management of obesity
Pharmacotherapy
Patient Education as Topic
Risk Factors
Weight Loss
Health care
medicine
Humans
Obesity
Child
Psychiatry
Intensive care medicine
Health Services Needs and Demand
Modalities
business.industry
Malnutrition
General Medicine
medicine.disease
Weight Reduction Programs
Socioeconomic Factors
Health Occupations
Anti-Obesity Agents
medicine.symptom
business
Risk Reduction Behavior
Algorithms
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 01406736
- Volume :
- 385
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Lancet
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....5615d04e9f11d852d0e9704d6a054627
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1016/s0140-6736(14)61748-7