4.6 Article

Clinical usefulness of brief screening tool for activating weight management discussions in primary cARE (AWARE): A nationwide mixed methods pilot study

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0259220

Keywords

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Funding

  1. iNova Pharmaceuticals (Australia) Pty Ltd
  2. National Association of Clinical Obesity Services Incorporated
  3. Western Sydney University [P00026836]

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The study evaluated the clinical usefulness of a new screening tool based on EOSS for activating weight management discussions in general practice. Thematic analysis of GP and patient views revealed five themes, including GP recognition of obesity as a health priority, obesity stigma, patient health literacy, patient motivation for self-management, and applicability and scalability.
Objective The Edmonton Obesity Staging System (EOSS) is based on weight related health complications among individuals with overweight and obesity requiring clinical intervention. We aimed to assess the clinical usefulness of a new screening tool based on the EOSS for activating weight management discussions in general practice. Methods We enrolled five General Practitioners (GPs) and 25 of their patients located nationwide in metropolitan areas of Australia to test the feasibility, acceptability, and accuracy of the new 'EOSS-2 Risk Tool', using cross-sectional and qualitative study designs. Diagnostic accuracy of the tool for the presence of EOSS >= 2 criteria was based on clinical information collected prospectively. To assess feasibility and applicability, we explored the views of GP and patient participants by thematic analysis of transcribed verbatim and de-identified data collected by semi-structured telephone interviews. Results Nineteen (76%) patients were aged >= 45 years, five (20%) were male, and 20 (80%) were classified with obesity. All 25 patients screened positive for EOSS >= 2 criteria by the tool. Interviews with patients continued until data saturation was reached resulting in a total of 23 interviews. Our thematic analysis revealed five themes: GP recognition of obesity as a health priority (GPs expressed strong interest in and understanding of its importance as a health priority); obesity stigma (GPs reported the tool helped them initiate health based and non-judgmental conversations with their patients); patient health literacy (GPs and patients reported increased awareness and understanding of weight related health risks), patient motivation for self-management (GPs and patients reported the tool helped focus on self-management of weight related complications), and applicability and scalability (GPs stated it was easy to use, relevant to a range of their patient groups, and scalable if integrated into existing patient management systems). Conclusion The EOSS-2 Risk Tool is potentially clinically useful for activating weight management discussions in general practice. Further research is required to assess feasibility and applicability.

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