Primary care physicians' knowledge and attitudes about obesity, adherence to treatment guidelines and its' association with confidence to treat obesity at the Saudi Ministry of Interior primary health care centers.

IF 1.1 Q4 PRIMARY HEALTH CARE Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-11 DOI:10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_7_24
Lama Mohammed Al Saud, Saad Ebrahem Altowairqi, Anwar Ali Showail, Bader Saad Alzahrani, Maha M Arnous, Raya Mohammed Alsuhaibani
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Abstract

Background and aim: Many primary care physicians (PCPs) believed that managing overweight and obesity is essential to their jobs, however, many believe that they were doing it ineffectively, unsatisfying, and had negative attitudes. We conducted this study to explore the knowledge, attitudes and adherence to obesity management guidelines, identify potential barriers that may prevent adherence of PCPs to obesity treatment guidelines.

Methods: We conducted this cross-sectional study and conducted a questionnaire sent via email to all PCPs in the Ministry of Interior centers in Riyadh, Al-Kharj, AlQassim, Wadi Ad Dawasir, Hail and Tabuk in Saudi Arabia.

Results: A total of 119 PCPs participated in the survey, 61 (51.3%) males and 58 (48.7%) females. All respondents (n = 119, 100%) answered correctly that obesity is a disease. Of PCPs surveyed, genetics accounted for 75.6% of the responses as the cause of obesity. 79.8% believed that the best way for patients with obesity to lose weight was to engage in regular physical activity. The majority of PCPs (87.4%) thought that treating obesity should be a top priority, and 88.2% would typically recommend obesity therapy to their patients. Around 68.9% of PCPs thought that it's their patients' responsibility to lose weight. The majority will recommend obesity treatment and 75.6% would talk to their patients about weight concerns, while 60.5% would refer their patients to obesity surgery. There was a positive significant association between higher knowledge and better attitude and better adherence to treatment guidelines. More experienced PCPs were more confident. The most common perceived barrier was the patients' lack of desire to follow obesity treatment.

Conclusion: Primary care clinics and PCPs play a crucial role in diagnosing and treating patients with obesity, according to Ministry of Health guidelines on the prevention and management of obesity. PCPs must not only acknowledge obesity as a chronic illness and the possible long-term consequences it may cause, but also provide comprehensive, multi-component interventions that include lifestyle changes, medication, and appropriate referrals for bariatric surgery when needed. Healthcare professionals must form a cooperative relationship with obese patients to ensure that the patients follow treatment protocols.

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沙特内政部初级保健中心的初级保健医生对肥胖症的认识和态度、治疗指南的遵守情况及其与治疗肥胖症的信心之间的关系。
背景和目的:许多初级保健医生(PCPs)认为,管理超重和肥胖对他们的工作至关重要,然而,许多人认为他们的工作效果不佳、不令人满意,而且态度消极。我们开展了这项研究,旨在探讨初级保健医生对肥胖症管理指南的了解、态度和遵守情况,找出可能阻碍初级保健医生遵守肥胖症治疗指南的潜在障碍:我们开展了这项横断面研究,并通过电子邮件向沙特阿拉伯利雅得、Al-Kharj、Al-Qassim、Wadi Ad Dawasir、Hail 和 Tabuk 的内政部中心的所有初级保健医生发送了调查问卷:共有 119 名初级保健医生参与了调查,其中男性 61 人(占 51.3%),女性 58 人(占 48.7%)。所有受访者(n = 119,100%)都正确回答了肥胖是一种疾病。在接受调查的初级保健医生中,75.6%的人认为遗传是肥胖的原因。79.8%的人认为肥胖症患者减轻体重的最佳方法是经常参加体育锻炼。大多数初级保健医生(87.4%)认为治疗肥胖症应是重中之重,88.2%的人通常会向病人推荐肥胖症治疗。约 68.9% 的初级保健医生认为减肥是患者的责任。大多数人会推荐肥胖治疗,75.6% 的人会与病人谈论体重问题,60.5% 的人会推荐病人接受肥胖手术。较高的知识水平和较好的态度与较好地遵守治疗指南之间存在正相关。经验丰富的初级保健医生更有信心。最常见的障碍是患者缺乏接受肥胖症治疗的意愿:结论:根据卫生部关于肥胖症预防和管理的指导方针,初级保健诊所和初级保健医生在诊断和治疗肥胖症患者方面发挥着至关重要的作用。初级保健医生不仅要认识到肥胖是一种慢性疾病以及可能造成的长期后果,还要提供全面、多成分的干预措施,包括改变生活方式、药物治疗以及在必要时适当转诊接受减肥手术。医护人员必须与肥胖患者建立合作关系,确保患者遵循治疗方案。
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7.10%
发文量
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审稿时长
40 weeks
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