Interventions to change the behaviour of health professionals and the organisation of care to promote weight reduction in children and adults with overweight or obesity

Dec 1, 2017The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Ways to help health workers and care systems support weight loss in children and adults with overweight or obesity

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Abstract

A total of 89,754 people were included across 12 studies assessing weight reduction strategies for overweight and obesity.

  • Educational interventions aimed at general practitioners may slightly reduce participant weight by an average of -1.24 kg, but the certainty of this evidence is low.
  • Tailoring interventions to improve general practitioners' compliance with obesity guidelines likely results in little or no difference in weight loss.
  • Providing clinicians with clinical decision support tools may lead to negligible changes in body mass index (BMI) for children and little to no weight loss in adults.
  • Adults with overweight or obesity may lose significantly more weight when care is provided by a dietitian or a doctor-dietitian team, with reductions of -5.60 kg and -6.70 kg, respectively.
  • Organizational restructuring of primary care may slightly reduce BMI increases in children receiving care at intervention clinics, with a change of -0.21.
  • Evidence across all evaluated interventions varies in certainty, with many results based on single studies and requiring further investigation.

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Full Text

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