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Barriers and enablers to effective weight management for people living with overweight and obesity: A rapid scoping review

Version 2 2024-11-18, 00:06
Version 1 2024-11-06, 04:52
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-18, 00:06 authored by Alemayehu MekonnenAlemayehu Mekonnen, Vidanka VasilevskiVidanka Vasilevski, Anna ChapmanAnna Chapman, Shaan NaughtonShaan Naughton, Eva YuenEva Yuen, Jane Willcox, Elizabeth Holmes‐Truscott, Jaithri AnanthapavanJaithri Ananthapavan, Fisaha TesfayFisaha Tesfay, Linda SweetLinda Sweet, Anna PeetersAnna Peeters
SummaryA scoping review was conducted to identify barriers and enablers to effective weight management in healthcare settings for people living with overweight and obesity in English‐speaking high‐income countries. Peer‐reviewed and gray literature were systematically searched in June 2024. Data were analyzed using inductive thematic analysis. Of the 15,684 unique articles identified and screened for relevance, 216 studies were included. Healthcare‐related barriers and enablers to weight management were organized under three themes: a) healthcare provider‐related factors, b) provision of care, and c) policy/funding. Prominent barriers included healthcare provider knowledge deficits and low prioritization of obesity management, mainly in the primary care setting. Weight management beyond the primary care setting was found to be especially challenging, with poor referral pathways, service fragmentation, lack of multidisciplinary practice, and restricted eligibility criteria, hindering the accessibility of services. Developing consistent policies and guidelines, improving the education of healthcare providers, and increasing funding to provide low‐cost comprehensive care, were identified as enablers to access and uptake of weight management services. Considerable overlap in the identified barriers existed across healthcare providers and settings. A whole health system approach to minimize barriers and strengthen enablers to weight management services is needed, to address rising obesity rates.

History

Journal

Obesity Reviews

Article number

e13858

Pagination

1-19

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1467-7881

eISSN

1467-789X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Publisher

Wiley

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