The complexity of reaching and maintaining a healthy body weight - the experience from adults with a mobility disability.

Q1 Medicine BMC Obesity Pub Date : 2018-12-03 eCollection Date: 2018-01-01 DOI:10.1186/s40608-018-0212-6
Marianne Holmgren, Magnus Sandberg, Gerd Ahlström
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Abstract

Background: People with a disability affecting their mobility are more likely to be overweight or obese than those without a mobility disability. The guidelines on how to prevent and treat overweight/obese adults in the general population have not been adapted to the needs of people with a mobility disability. A reasonable useful first step in the process of adapting such guidelines is to conduct a qualitative study of the perceived needs of these people.

Aim: The aim was to explore the experienced importance of body weight among adults with a mobility disability and their perceived needs and actions to reach and maintain a healthy weight.

Method: This was an explorative qualitative study based on individual interviews and qualitative content analysis. An inductive analysis of the interviews formed the basis for the establishment of sub-categories, main categories and, finally, a main theme. The twenty participants included in the study have had a mobility disability for more than two years before being recruited.

Results: The overall theme, "The complex trajectory to a healthy weight", included four main categories. In the category (i) Vicious circle of problems, the participants perceived that everything was harder with the combination of a mobility disability and being overweight/obese with one factor making the other worse. In (ii) Strategies based on decisions and attempts, the participants talked about different ways of attempting to reach or maintain a healthy weight. In (iii) Internal resources, they spoke of awareness and motivation as contributory factors. In (iv) External resources - experienced and required, they spoke about feelings that their weight problems were not given high priority in primary health care. They found it difficult to get advice designed for persons with a mobility disability and felt that competence was lacking among health professionals. The participants asked for a team of professionals with adequate knowledge concerning mobility disabilities.

Conclusions: People with a mobility disability combined with being overweight/obese have a complex living situation and health needs. The experiences communicated by participants may facilitate adaption of existing intervention programs or development of a new evidence-based obesity prevention program for primary health care settings.

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达到并保持健康体重的复杂性--来自行动不便的成年人的经验。
背景:与没有行动障碍的人相比,有行动障碍的人更容易超重或肥胖。关于如何预防和治疗普通人群中超重/肥胖的指南还没有根据行动不便者的需求进行调整。目的:本研究旨在探讨行动不便的成年人对体重的重视程度,以及他们认为达到和保持健康体重的需求和行动:这是一项基于个人访谈和定性内容分析的探索性定性研究。在对访谈内容进行归纳分析的基础上,确定了子类别、主要类别,最后确定了主题。参与研究的 20 名参与者在被招募前均有两年以上的行动障碍:总主题 "健康体重的复杂轨迹 "包括四个主要类别。在(i) 问题的恶性循环类别中,参与者认为,在行动不便和超重/肥胖的共同作用下,一切都变得更加困难,一个因素使另一个因素变得更加糟糕。在(ii) 基于决定和尝试的策略中,参与者谈到了尝试达到或保持健康体重的不同方法。在(iii)内部资源方面,他们谈到意识和动机是促成因素。在(iv)外部资源--经验和需求方面,他们谈到,他们感到自己的体重问题在初级卫生保健中没有得到高度重视。他们认为很难获得专为行动不便者设计的建议,并认为医疗专业人员缺乏能力。参与者要求建立一支对行动不便有充分了解的专业团队:结论:行动不便且超重/肥胖的人有着复杂的生活状况和健康需求。参与者交流的经验可能有助于调整现有的干预计划,或为初级卫生保健机构开发新的循证肥胖预防计划。
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来源期刊
BMC Obesity
BMC Obesity Medicine-Health Policy
CiteScore
5.00
自引率
0.00%
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0
期刊介绍: Cesation (2019). Information not localized.
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