Editorial Volume 6 Issue 3
South Galicia Biomedical Research Institute and Endocrine Unit, HM Hospital of Vigo, Spain
Correspondence: icardo V Garcia Mayor, South Galicia Health Research Institute, University Hospital of Vigo, Technic Block, 2nd floor, 341 Clara Campoamor Street, 36312 Vigo, Spain, Tel +34/630/963 866
Received: May 25, 2018 | Published: June 5, 2018
Citation: Mayor RVG. Management of obese people: the others barriers. Endocrinol Metab Int J. 2018;6(3):213. DOI: 10.15406/emij.2018.06.00177
Obesity is considered a multifactorial disease, with the participation of genetic, epigenetic, behavioural, socio-cultural and environmental factors,1 that produce an imbalance between expenditure and energy intake, during long time. It is often unrecognized that although obesity was included in the classic listing of diseases in 1948, the doctors dismissed it for decades.2,3 This was probably related to the fact that obesity was considered a reversible problem, that can be solved if people eat less and increase their physical activity, this misunderstanding persists today, and is at least in part responsible for the increase in incidence and prevalence of obese people that reaches a magnitude that is considered an epidemic around the world.
Other factors such as less sleep, cessation of smoking, weight gain associated with some medications, older parental age at birth, and endocrine disruptors are factors recognized as contributors to such a situation.4 The aforementioned factors explain the increase in the prevalence of obese people throughout the world, but they have little, or no value when we are in front of a patient, as discussed below.
In general, the treatment of people with obesity is based on a change in lifestyle that includes changes in their eating pattern and increase in physical activity, this seems easy to understand presents many problems when it comes to doing it.5 The majority of patients leave the treatment after a few weeks or months. The lack of adherence to the different regimes may due to:
The key question is why that happens, the answer is not unique either. In almost all countries around the world, health care is characterized by a provider-centred model,8 rather than people-centred model, with an emphasis on the diagnosis and treatment of diseases that obviously gives little importance to the individual characteristics of each patient, basic to their management. Lack of qualified and experienced health personnel to treat such complex patients. Surprisingly, many of the so-called obesity experts are not clinicians. Unfortunately, very often the health managers to lower costs, and with the support of specialists, who feel unable to treat these difficult patients, refer them to the primary care or nursing units.
The improvement in the management, not of obesity, but of patients with obesity begins with the qualification of the professionals who have to treat them, with sufficient experience; it is not enough to follow valid protocols for all.
None.
The Author declares there no conflict of interest.
©2018 Mayor. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and build upon your work non-commercially.