Healthcare professionals perceptions of obesity management: An IMI2 SOPHIA qualitative study

Author:

Steenackers Nele1ORCID,Willio Seppe1,Bruneel Anne2,Deleus Ellen13,Lannoo Matthias13,Matthys Christophe14,Mertens Ann14,Van Craeyveld Eline5,Vangoitsenhoven Roman14,Van der Schueren Bart14

Affiliation:

1. Clinical and Experimental Endocrinology, Department of Chronic Diseases and Metabolism KU Leuven Leuven Belgium

2. Department of Market Access & Public Affairs NovoNordisk Anderlecht Belgium

3. Department of Abdominal Surgery University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

4. Department of Endocrinology University Hospitals Leuven Leuven Belgium

5. Departement of Medical Affairs NovoNordisk Anderlecht Belgium

Abstract

SummaryUnderstanding healthcare professionals' perceptions and approaches to obesity management is limited, as are the barriers impeding effective care. A questionnaire was developed to explore the perception, and barriers to obesity management. To ensure content validity, an expert and stakeholder panel evaluated the relevance and comprehension of each item. Consequently, a cross‐sectional survey was administered to endocrinologists (Endo), general practitioners (GP), and pharmacists (Pharm). A 46‐item questionnaire was developed, validated, and completed by 502 healthcare professionals (Endo: n = 127; GP: n = 138; Pharm: n = 237). The majority agreed that obesity is a chronic disease (Endo = 96%; GP = 92.7%; Pharm = 87%). The conversation about obesity management is mostly initiated by the healthcare professional (Endo = 95.3%; GP = 73.9%; Pharm = 5.9%) instead of the patient (Endo = 55.1%; GP = 21.7%; Pharm = 11.8%). All professionals stated unanimously that there is a need to optimise obesity care in Belgium with identified barriers: motivational (Endo = 90.8%; GP = 90.8%; Pharm = 89.2%), financial (Endo = 96.9%; GP = 88.5%; Pharm = 76.3%), and a lack of structure (Endo = 81.5%; GP = 78.6%; Pharm = 81.5%). A total of 42.4% of the healthcare providers indicated that they did not follow any additional training. These findings highlight that healthcare professionals recognise obesity as a chronic disease, but that barriers need to be addressed to enhance effective care and support for people living with obesity.

Publisher

Wiley

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