ACTION APAC: Understanding perceptions, attitudes and behaviours in obesity and its management across south and Southeast Asia

Author:

Tham Kwang Wei1,Ahmed Asma2ORCID,Boonyavarakul Apussanee3,Garcia Mariana Mercado4,Guajardo Miroslava5,Hanipah Zubaidah Nor6,Nam Tran Quang7,Nicodemus Nemencio A.8,Pathan Faruque9,Romano Jack Garcia Uranga4,Soegonda Sidartawan10,Tolentino Edgardo L.11,Unnikrishnan Ambika Gopalakrishnan (A. G).12,Oldfield Brian J.13

Affiliation:

1. Endocrinology Services, Department of Medicine, Woodlands Health National Healthcare Group Singapore Singapore

2. The Aga Khan University Hospital Karachi Pakistan

3. Division of Endocrinology, Department of Internal Medicine Phramongkutklao Hospital Thailand

4. Novo Nordisk Pharma Gulf LLC Dubai UAE

5. Novo Nordisk Business Area Southeast Asia Kuala Lumpur Malaysia

6. Department of Surgery, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences Universiti Putra Malaysia Selangor Malaysia

7. University Medical Center Ho Chi Minh City Vietnam

8. University of the Philippines‐College of Medicine Manila Philippines

9. Department of Endocrinology Ibrahim Memorial Diabetes Center Dhaka Bangladesh

10. Indonesia Diabetes Institute, Diabetes Connection & Care Eka Hospitals Jakarta Indonesia

11. Ateneo School of Medicine and Public Health Pasig Metro Manila Philippines

12. Chellaram Diabetes Institute Pune India

13. Department of Physiology, Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute Monash University Melbourne Australia

Abstract

SummaryTo identify perceptions and attitudes among people with obesity (PwO) and healthcare professionals (HCPs) toward obesity and its management in nine Asia‐Pacific (APAC) countries, a cross‐sectional online survey was conducted among adult PwO with self‐reported body mass index of ≥25 kg/m2 (≥27 kg/m2, Singapore), and HCPs involved in direct patient care. In total, 10 429 PwO and 1901 HCPs completed the survey. Most PwO (68%) and HCPs (84%) agreed that obesity is a disease; however, a significant proportion of PwO (63%) and HCPs (41%) believed weight loss was the complete responsibility of PwO and only 43% of PwO discussed weight with an HCP in the prior 5 years. Most respondents acknowledged that weight loss would be extremely beneficial to PwO's overall health (PwO 76%, HCPs 85%), although nearly half (45%) of PwO misperceived themselves as overweight or of normal weight. Obesity was perceived by PwO (58%) and HCPs (53%) to negatively impact PwO forming romantic relationships. HCPs cited PwOs' lack of interest (41%) and poor motivation (37%) to lose weight as top reasons for not discussing weight. Most PwO (65%) preferred lifestyle changes over medications to lose weight. PwO and HCPs agreed that lack of exercise and unhealthy eating habits were the major barriers to weight loss. Our data highlights a discordance between the understanding of obesity as a disease and the actual behaviour and preferred approaches to manage it among PwO and HCPs. The study addresses a need to align these gaps to deliver optimal care for PwO.

Funder

Novo Nordisk

Publisher

Wiley

Reference21 articles.

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