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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 9/2021

01-09-2021 | Obesity | Original Research

The Joys and Challenges of Delivering Obesity Care: a Qualitative Study of US Primary Care Practices

Authors: Andrea Nederveld, MD, MPH, Phoutdavone Phimphasone-Brady, PhD, Lauri Connelly, MS, Laurie Fitzpatrick, BA, Jodi Summers Holtrop, PhD, MCHES

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 9/2021

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Abstract

Background

Obesity is of epidemic proportion in the USA but most people with obesity do not receive treatment.

Objective

To explore the experience of providing obesity management among primary care clinicians and their team members involved with weight loss in primary care practices. The study’s focus was on examining the use of the Medicare payment code for intensive behavioral therapy for obesity (IBT), but other obesity management services and payment mechanisms were also studied.

Design/Participants

We conducted 85 interviews of clinicians (physician, advanced practice clinicians, registered dietitian, or other) practicing in primary care practices. Interviews gathered information about treatment approach to obesity, barriers, and facilitators to providing obesity care including the handling of billing and reimbursement (especially use of the IBT code), personal beliefs about the appropriateness of primary care providing weight loss services, and recommendations for improving weight management in primary care practice. The analysis was conducted using a grounded theory hermeneutic editing approach and the constant comparative method.

Key Results

Seventy-five interviews were included in this analysis. We identified three primary themes: (1) clinicians and staff involved in obesity management in primary care believe that addressing obesity is an essential part of primary care services, (2) because providing obesity care can be challenging, many practices opt out of treatment, and (3) despite the challenges, many clinicians and others find treating obesity feasible, satisfying, and worthwhile.

Conclusions

Treating obesity in primary care settings poses several challenges but can also be very satisfying and rewarding. To improve the ability of clinicians and practice members to treat obesity, important changes in payment, education, and work processes are necessary.
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Metadata
Title
The Joys and Challenges of Delivering Obesity Care: a Qualitative Study of US Primary Care Practices
Authors
Andrea Nederveld, MD, MPH
Phoutdavone Phimphasone-Brady, PhD
Lauri Connelly, MS
Laurie Fitzpatrick, BA
Jodi Summers Holtrop, PhD, MCHES
Publication date
01-09-2021
Publisher
Springer International Publishing
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 9/2021
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-020-06548-w

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