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- Title
Doctors and patients' perspectives on obesity. A Q-methodology study.
- Authors
Shahed, Qays; Baranowska, Karolina; Galavazi, Marije C; Cao, Yang; Nieuwenhoven, Michiel A van; van Nieuwenhoven, Michiel A
- Abstract
<bold>Background: </bold>Obesity is associated with stigma and discrimination. Health care providers should approach these patients professionally and without stigma, since treatment of obesity requires a relationship with mutual understanding between the doctor and patient.<bold>Objective: </bold>To explore how patients and general practitioners (GPs) perceive obesity, using Q-methodology, which allows quantitative analysis of qualitative data.<bold>Methods: </bold>A Q-methodology study, comprising 24 patients with obesity and 24 GPs. We created 48 statements with viewpoints on obesity. All participants sorted these statements in a forced grid with a quasi-normal distribution ranking from -5 (most disagree) to +5 (most agree). Subsequently, factor analysis was performed. Six patients were interviewed to explain their viewpoints.<bold>Results: </bold>Analysis yielded 3 dominant groups (factors) of patients: (i) They acknowledge the importance of healthy lifestyle and feel mistreated by health care. (ii) They have a decreased quality of life, but do not blame health care, and (iii) They don't need treatment and don't have an impaired quality of life. For the GPs, the 3 dominant factors were: (i) They have understanding for the patients and feel that health care is insufficient, (ii) They believe that obesity may be hereditary but mainly is a lifestyle problem, and (iii) They believe obesity can be treated but is very difficult.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>Viewpoints on obesity were different, both within and between the groups. Some GPs consider obesity mainly as a lifestyle problem, rather than a chronic disease. If patients and doctors can find mutual viewpoints on obesity, both patient satisfaction and a treatment strategy will be more effective.
- Subjects
OBESITY treatment; ATTITUDES of medical personnel; PATIENT satisfaction; QUALITATIVE research; QUALITY of life; FACTOR analysis; RESEARCH funding
- Publication
Family Practice, 2022, Vol 39, Issue 4, p694
- ISSN
0263-2136
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1093/fampra/cmab169