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Improving health professionals' management and the organisation of care for overweight and obese peopleHarvey E, Glenny A-M, Kirk S, Summerbell CD SummaryThe care and management of people who are overweight or obese can be improved by a combination of physician and patient interventionsObesity is increasing in industrialised countries, with negative consequences for individuals, populations and health service costs. Strategies to reduce obesity usually focus on what people themselves can do to lose weight. However, the situation may be improved by a combination of what patients, professionals and health care organisations can do. We found that sharing care between GPs and hospitals and issuing doctors with reminders about management strategies led to some improvements in obesity care. In-patient management also offered encouraging prospects. Brief training packages for doctors, in which attitudes towards obesity management are also addressed, may also be worth further investigation.
This is a Cochrane review abstract and plain language summary, prepared and maintained by The Cochrane Collaboration, currently published in The Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews 2010 Issue 1, Copyright © 2010 The Cochrane Collaboration. Published by John Wiley and Sons, Ltd.. The full text of the review is available in The Cochrane Library (ISSN 1464-780X).
This version first published online:
January 25. 1999 AbstractBackgroundObesity is increasing throughout the industrialised world. If left unchecked it will have major implications for both population health and costs to health services. ObjectivesTo assess whether health professionals' management or the organisation of care for overweight and obese people could be improved. Search strategyWe searched the specialised registers of the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care Group (April 2000), the Cochrane Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis Group (August 1997), the Cochrane Diabetes Group (August 1997), the Cochrane Controlled Trials Register (September 1997), MEDLINE to April 2000, EMBASE to February 2000, Cinahl (1982 to February 2000), PsycLit (1974 to May 2000), Sigle (1980 to April 2000), Sociofile (1974 to October 1997), Dissertation Abstracts (1861 to January 1998), Conference Papers Index (1973 to January 1998), Resource Database in Continuing Medical Education. We also hand searched seven key journals and contacted experts in the field. Selection criteriaRandomised trials, controlled before-and-after studies and interrupted time series analyses of providers' management of obesity or the organisation of care to improve provider practice or patient outcomes. We addressed three a priori comparisons and a fourth post hoc comparison. 1. Interventions aimed at improving health professionals' management or the delivery of health care for overweight/obese patients are more effective than usual care. 2. Interventions aimed at redressing negative attitudes and related practices towards overweight/obese patients are more effective than usual care. 3. Organisational interventions designed to change the structure of services for overweight/obese people are more effective than educational or behavioural interventions for health professionals. 4. Comparisons of different organisational interventions. Data collection and analysisTwo reviewers independently extracted data and assessed study quality. Main resultsEighteen studies were included involving 446 providers and 4158 patients. Six studies were identified for comparison 1. Five were professional-oriented interventions (the use of reminders and training) and the sixth was a study of professional and organisational interventions of shared care. No studies were identified for comparisons 2 or 3. Twelve studies were identified for post hoc comparison 4. These compared either the deliverer of weight loss interventions or the setting of interventions. The included studies were heterogeneous and of questionable quality according to the Cochrane Effective Practice and Organisation of Care (EPOC) Group criteria. Authors' conclusionsAt present, there are few solid leads about improving obesity management, although reminder systems, brief training interventions, shared care, in-patient care and dietitian-led treatments may all be worth further investigation. In addition, decisions for the improvement of provision of services must be based on the existing evidence on interventions with patients and good clinical judgement. Further research is needed to identify cost effective strategies for improving the management of obesity. |