Screening and counseling for childhood obesity: results from a national survey

To examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and obesity. Surveys about management of childhood overweight were mailed to 1800 American Academy of Family Physician members in 2006. 729 surveys were returned;...

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Published in:Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine Vol. 23; no. 3; pp. 334 - 342
Main Authors: Sesselberg, Tracy S, Klein, Jonathan D, O'Connor, Karen G, Johnson, Mark S
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: United States 01-05-2010
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Abstract To examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and obesity. Surveys about management of childhood overweight were mailed to 1800 American Academy of Family Physician members in 2006. 729 surveys were returned; 445 were eligible. Most (71%) members were familiar with BMI guidelines; 41% were familiar with American Academy of Family Physician recommendations about overweight. Most (78%) had tools available to calculate BMI; fewer have enough time for overweight screening (55%), and only 45% reported computing BMI percentile at most or every well visit for children older than 2. Having an electronic health record increased BMI screening rates. Family physicians felt prepared to discuss weight, but only 43% believed their counseling was effective and many (55%) lack community or referral services. Most (72%) wanted simple diet and exercise recommendations for patients. Reimbursement for weight-related services is insufficient: 86% say that patients cannot pay for services not covered by insurance. Factor analysis identified clinician self-efficacy, resources, and reimbursement as factors related to calculating BMI percentiles. BMI is underutilized by family physicians. Most believe they should try to prevent overweight and have tools to use BMI, but clinicians have few resources available for treatment, have low self-efficacy, and report inadequate reimbursement.
AbstractList To examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and obesity. Surveys about management of childhood overweight were mailed to 1800 American Academy of Family Physician members in 2006. 729 surveys were returned; 445 were eligible. Most (71%) members were familiar with BMI guidelines; 41% were familiar with American Academy of Family Physician recommendations about overweight. Most (78%) had tools available to calculate BMI; fewer have enough time for overweight screening (55%), and only 45% reported computing BMI percentile at most or every well visit for children older than 2. Having an electronic health record increased BMI screening rates. Family physicians felt prepared to discuss weight, but only 43% believed their counseling was effective and many (55%) lack community or referral services. Most (72%) wanted simple diet and exercise recommendations for patients. Reimbursement for weight-related services is insufficient: 86% say that patients cannot pay for services not covered by insurance. Factor analysis identified clinician self-efficacy, resources, and reimbursement as factors related to calculating BMI percentiles. BMI is underutilized by family physicians. Most believe they should try to prevent overweight and have tools to use BMI, but clinicians have few resources available for treatment, have low self-efficacy, and report inadequate reimbursement.
PURPOSETo examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and obesity.METHODSSurveys about management of childhood overweight were mailed to 1800 American Academy of Family Physician members in 2006.RESULTS729 surveys were returned; 445 were eligible. Most (71%) members were familiar with BMI guidelines; 41% were familiar with American Academy of Family Physician recommendations about overweight. Most (78%) had tools available to calculate BMI; fewer have enough time for overweight screening (55%), and only 45% reported computing BMI percentile at most or every well visit for children older than 2. Having an electronic health record increased BMI screening rates. Family physicians felt prepared to discuss weight, but only 43% believed their counseling was effective and many (55%) lack community or referral services. Most (72%) wanted simple diet and exercise recommendations for patients. Reimbursement for weight-related services is insufficient: 86% say that patients cannot pay for services not covered by insurance. Factor analysis identified clinician self-efficacy, resources, and reimbursement as factors related to calculating BMI percentiles.CONCLUSIONSBMI is underutilized by family physicians. Most believe they should try to prevent overweight and have tools to use BMI, but clinicians have few resources available for treatment, have low self-efficacy, and report inadequate reimbursement.
Author O'Connor, Karen G
Johnson, Mark S
Klein, Jonathan D
Sesselberg, Tracy S
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BackLink https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20453179$$D View this record in MEDLINE/PubMed
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Snippet To examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and obesity. Surveys about...
PURPOSETo examine family physicians' beliefs and practices about using body mass index (BMI) percentiles to screen for childhood overweight and...
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StartPage 334
SubjectTerms Adult
Attitude of Health Personnel
Body Mass Index
Child
Child Welfare
Directive Counseling
Female
Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice
Humans
Illinois
Male
Mass Screening
Nutrition Surveys
Obesity - diagnosis
Obesity - epidemiology
Obesity - prevention & control
Perception
Physicians, Family
Practice Patterns, Physicians
Title Screening and counseling for childhood obesity: results from a national survey
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Volume 23
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