Conceptualizing weight management for night shift workers: A mixed‐methods systematic review

Author:

Davis Corinne1ORCID,Huggins Catherine E.12ORCID,Kleve Sue1,Leung Gloria K. W.1,Bonham Maxine P.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Nutrition, Dietetics and Food, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences Monash University Notting Hill Australia

2. Institute for Health Transformation, Global Centre for Preventive Health and Nutrition, School of Health and Social Development, Faculty of Health Deakin University Geelong Australia

Abstract

SummaryShift workers have an increased risk of obesity and metabolic conditions. This mixed‐methods systematic literature review on night shift workers aimed to: (1) identify barriers/enablers of weight management; (2) examine effectiveness of weight management interventions; and (3) determine whether interventions addressed enablers/barriers. Six databases were searched, articles screened by title/abstract, followed by full‐text review, and quality assessment. Eligible qualitative studies documented experiences of behaviors related to weight change. Eligible quantitative studies were behavior change interventions with weight/body mass index outcomes. A thematic synthesis was undertaken for qualitative studies using the social‐ecological model (SEM). Interventions were synthesized narratively including: weight/body composition change; components mapped by behavior change taxonomy; and SEM. A synthesis was undertaken to identify if interventions addressed perceived enablers/barriers. Eight qualitative (n = 169 participants) and 12 quantitative studies (n = 1142 participants) were included. Barriers predominated discussions: intrapersonal (time, fatigue, stress); interpersonal (work routines/cultural norms); organizational (fatigue, lack of: routine, healthy food options, breaks/predictable work); community (lack of healthy food options). The primary outcome for interventions was not weight loss and most did not address many identified enablers/barriers. One intervention reported a clinically significant weight loss result. Weight loss interventions that address barriers/enablers at multiple SEM levels are needed.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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