ACTION Teens Saudi Arabia: Perceptions, attitudes, motivators, and barriers among adolescents living with obesity, caregivers, and healthcare professionals in Saudi Arabia

Author:

Bin‐Abbas Bassam1,Al Sagheir Afaf1,Taher Lama2,Elbadawi Hussein3,Al Fares Abdulah4,Al Harbi Mohammed5,Refaat Mohamed6,Ashmawy Ahmed6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Pediatrics King Faisal Specialist Hospital Riyadh Saudi Arabia

2. Department of Psychiatry King Faisal Specialist Hospital Riyadh Saudi Arabia

3. Metabolic Unit My Clinic International Jeddah Saudi Arabia

4. Department of Pediatrics, Endocrine Unit Security Forces Hospital Riyadh Saudi Arabia

5. Therapeutic Services Deputyship Ministry of Health Riyadh Saudi Arabia

6. Clinical and Medical Department Novo Nordisk Riyadh Saudi Arabia

Abstract

SummaryObesity is predicted to affect approximately one‐quarter of children/adolescents in Saudi Arabia by 2030, but there is limited evidence regarding the perceptions, attitudes, behaviours, and barriers to effective obesity care for adolescents living with obesity (ALwO), caregivers of ALwO, and healthcare professionals (HCPs). We report data from 500 ALwO (aged 12–<18 years), 500 caregivers, and 200 HCPs surveyed in Saudi Arabia as part of the global, cross‐sectional ACTION Teens study (NCT05013359). Nearly all respondents recognized that obesity has a strong impact on overall health (ALwO 88%; caregivers 85%; HCPs 90%). Most ALwO and caregivers were aware of the ALwO's obesity status (95% and 99%, respectively) and worried about weight impacting the ALwO's future health (both ≥99%), and social media was their most commonly used source of weight‐management information (60% and 53%, respectively). Among ALwO and caregivers who had discussed weight with an HCP in the past year, most experienced ≥1 negative feeling following their most recent discussion (61% and 59%, respectively). Although 81% of HCPs felt motivated to help their ALwO patients lose weight, 57% believed weight loss was completely the ALwO's responsibility (compared with only 37% of ALwO and 35% of caregivers). This may reflect the finding that only 24% of HCPs had received advanced training in obesity/weight management after medical school. Overall, while respondents had similar perceptions of the impact of obesity, we found HCPs' attitudes towards weight loss were not aligned with those of ALwO and caregivers, suggesting a need for improved communication and obesity education.

Publisher

Wiley

Reference17 articles.

1. Obesity: a chronic relapsing progressive disease process. A position statement of the World Obesity Federation

2. World Health Organization.Obesity and overweight. 2021. Accessed October 26 2023https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/obesity-and-overweight

3. Epidemiology, Predisposing Factors, Biomarkers, and Prevention Mechanism of Obesity: A Systematic Review

4. World Obesity Federation.World Obesity Atlas 2022.2022. Accessed October 26 2023https://www.worldobesity.org/resources/resource-library/world-obesity-atlas-2022

5. World Health Organization.Nutrition country profile: Saudi Arabia. 2023. Accessed October 26 2023https://apps.who.int/iris/bitstream/handle/10665/367686/WHOEMNUT305E-eng.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y

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