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Almost all primary care physicians want to help obese patients lose weight, but they say that no one in their practice knows enough to adequately deal with weight-related issues, a survey revealed.
The survey of 290 primary care physicians, conducted by Harris Interactive late in 2009 and sponsored by the STOP (Strategies to Overcome and Prevent) Obesity Alliance, indicated physicians agree that a 5%-10% weight loss would help their obese patients.
But a companion survey of American adults released at the same time by the STOP Obesity Alliance found that only 39% of obese adults (those with a body mass index of 30 kg/m
Those adults whose physicians used the term obese also said that the physician recommended they lose weight. But about one in three of these said that their physicians never discussed the mechanics of how to go about losing weight, the survey of 1,002 adults reported.
This results in a disconnect between the information that obese patients need from their physicians and what physicians actually tell them about losing weight, according to presenters at a briefing on the results from the two surveys.
“Patients want more information about weight management. They're hungry for it, and they don't know what information to believe,” said Roz Pierson, Ph.D., Harris Interactive vice president of health policy research. “But a lot of primary care physicians said they or no one in their office had been trained to discuss weight issues. If you don't feel like you have the training to deal with weight issues, you can see why there is a lack of willingness to have a dialogue.”
Both physicians and patients agree that even a small amount of weight loss is beneficial, according to the surveys. In all, 80% of patients who consider themselves overweight or obese, along with 91% of physicians, agree that the risk of disease is reduced “a great deal” or “somewhat” following a weight loss of 5%-10%.
Physicians told surveyors that they recommended a variety of strategies to patients for weight loss, including improving their diets, counting calories, and reading a book or visiting a Web site. Physicians also said they recommended that their overweight or obese patients see a weight-loss specialist, enroll in community-based organizations, consider clinical programs for weight loss, or even have bariatric surgery.
However, physicians told surveyors that they didn't have the training or tools to properly counsel patients on weight, and they also lacked the time needed with those patients to do the job right.
Former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona, who serves as health and wellness chairperson of the STOP Obesity Alliance, said at the briefing that solving the problem of time to deal with obesity and other preventive health issues would require a health system overhaul.
Still, he urged physicians to take the time if possible under the current system. “You can say, 'I'd like to take the time, but I don't have the time.' But would you say that if patient walked in with chest pains? In diabetic acidosis? With a broken arm?” Dr. Carmona asked.
Dr. William Bestermann Jr., medical director of Holston Medical Group Integrated Health Services in Houston, one of the most obese areas in the country, agreed that a health system overhaul would be needed to give physicians ample time to counsel patients on weight loss.
“The system produces the results it was designed to produce,” Dr. Bestermann said. “We do all this pricey stuff at the end of the game. We need to shift some of those resources from the end game” in order to help people lose weight and lower their risks of chronic and acute health issues from the beginning, he said.
The STOP Obesity Alliance recommended the following five strategies to improve the treatment of obesity within primary care:
▸ Monitor weight, health indicators, and risk.
▸ Assess patient motivation and readiness for change.
▸ Define success in terms of health improvement rather than looks.
▸ Increase integration and care coordination among providers.
▸ Implement electronic medical records.
Almost all primary care physicians want to help obese patients lose weight, but they say that no one in their practice knows enough to adequately deal with weight-related issues, a survey revealed.
The survey of 290 primary care physicians, conducted by Harris Interactive late in 2009 and sponsored by the STOP (Strategies to Overcome and Prevent) Obesity Alliance, indicated physicians agree that a 5%-10% weight loss would help their obese patients.
But a companion survey of American adults released at the same time by the STOP Obesity Alliance found that only 39% of obese adults (those with a body mass index of 30 kg/m
Those adults whose physicians used the term obese also said that the physician recommended they lose weight. But about one in three of these said that their physicians never discussed the mechanics of how to go about losing weight, the survey of 1,002 adults reported.
This results in a disconnect between the information that obese patients need from their physicians and what physicians actually tell them about losing weight, according to presenters at a briefing on the results from the two surveys.
“Patients want more information about weight management. They're hungry for it, and they don't know what information to believe,” said Roz Pierson, Ph.D., Harris Interactive vice president of health policy research. “But a lot of primary care physicians said they or no one in their office had been trained to discuss weight issues. If you don't feel like you have the training to deal with weight issues, you can see why there is a lack of willingness to have a dialogue.”
Both physicians and patients agree that even a small amount of weight loss is beneficial, according to the surveys. In all, 80% of patients who consider themselves overweight or obese, along with 91% of physicians, agree that the risk of disease is reduced “a great deal” or “somewhat” following a weight loss of 5%-10%.
Physicians told surveyors that they recommended a variety of strategies to patients for weight loss, including improving their diets, counting calories, and reading a book or visiting a Web site. Physicians also said they recommended that their overweight or obese patients see a weight-loss specialist, enroll in community-based organizations, consider clinical programs for weight loss, or even have bariatric surgery.
However, physicians told surveyors that they didn't have the training or tools to properly counsel patients on weight, and they also lacked the time needed with those patients to do the job right.
Former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona, who serves as health and wellness chairperson of the STOP Obesity Alliance, said at the briefing that solving the problem of time to deal with obesity and other preventive health issues would require a health system overhaul.
Still, he urged physicians to take the time if possible under the current system. “You can say, 'I'd like to take the time, but I don't have the time.' But would you say that if patient walked in with chest pains? In diabetic acidosis? With a broken arm?” Dr. Carmona asked.
Dr. William Bestermann Jr., medical director of Holston Medical Group Integrated Health Services in Houston, one of the most obese areas in the country, agreed that a health system overhaul would be needed to give physicians ample time to counsel patients on weight loss.
“The system produces the results it was designed to produce,” Dr. Bestermann said. “We do all this pricey stuff at the end of the game. We need to shift some of those resources from the end game” in order to help people lose weight and lower their risks of chronic and acute health issues from the beginning, he said.
The STOP Obesity Alliance recommended the following five strategies to improve the treatment of obesity within primary care:
▸ Monitor weight, health indicators, and risk.
▸ Assess patient motivation and readiness for change.
▸ Define success in terms of health improvement rather than looks.
▸ Increase integration and care coordination among providers.
▸ Implement electronic medical records.
Almost all primary care physicians want to help obese patients lose weight, but they say that no one in their practice knows enough to adequately deal with weight-related issues, a survey revealed.
The survey of 290 primary care physicians, conducted by Harris Interactive late in 2009 and sponsored by the STOP (Strategies to Overcome and Prevent) Obesity Alliance, indicated physicians agree that a 5%-10% weight loss would help their obese patients.
But a companion survey of American adults released at the same time by the STOP Obesity Alliance found that only 39% of obese adults (those with a body mass index of 30 kg/m
Those adults whose physicians used the term obese also said that the physician recommended they lose weight. But about one in three of these said that their physicians never discussed the mechanics of how to go about losing weight, the survey of 1,002 adults reported.
This results in a disconnect between the information that obese patients need from their physicians and what physicians actually tell them about losing weight, according to presenters at a briefing on the results from the two surveys.
“Patients want more information about weight management. They're hungry for it, and they don't know what information to believe,” said Roz Pierson, Ph.D., Harris Interactive vice president of health policy research. “But a lot of primary care physicians said they or no one in their office had been trained to discuss weight issues. If you don't feel like you have the training to deal with weight issues, you can see why there is a lack of willingness to have a dialogue.”
Both physicians and patients agree that even a small amount of weight loss is beneficial, according to the surveys. In all, 80% of patients who consider themselves overweight or obese, along with 91% of physicians, agree that the risk of disease is reduced “a great deal” or “somewhat” following a weight loss of 5%-10%.
Physicians told surveyors that they recommended a variety of strategies to patients for weight loss, including improving their diets, counting calories, and reading a book or visiting a Web site. Physicians also said they recommended that their overweight or obese patients see a weight-loss specialist, enroll in community-based organizations, consider clinical programs for weight loss, or even have bariatric surgery.
However, physicians told surveyors that they didn't have the training or tools to properly counsel patients on weight, and they also lacked the time needed with those patients to do the job right.
Former U.S. Surgeon General Richard Carmona, who serves as health and wellness chairperson of the STOP Obesity Alliance, said at the briefing that solving the problem of time to deal with obesity and other preventive health issues would require a health system overhaul.
Still, he urged physicians to take the time if possible under the current system. “You can say, 'I'd like to take the time, but I don't have the time.' But would you say that if patient walked in with chest pains? In diabetic acidosis? With a broken arm?” Dr. Carmona asked.
Dr. William Bestermann Jr., medical director of Holston Medical Group Integrated Health Services in Houston, one of the most obese areas in the country, agreed that a health system overhaul would be needed to give physicians ample time to counsel patients on weight loss.
“The system produces the results it was designed to produce,” Dr. Bestermann said. “We do all this pricey stuff at the end of the game. We need to shift some of those resources from the end game” in order to help people lose weight and lower their risks of chronic and acute health issues from the beginning, he said.
The STOP Obesity Alliance recommended the following five strategies to improve the treatment of obesity within primary care:
▸ Monitor weight, health indicators, and risk.
▸ Assess patient motivation and readiness for change.
▸ Define success in terms of health improvement rather than looks.
▸ Increase integration and care coordination among providers.
▸ Implement electronic medical records.