Developing Integrated Clinical Pathways for the Management of Clinically Severe Adult Obesity: a Critique of NHS England Policy.
Jonathan M HazlehurstJennifer LogueHelen M ParrettiSally AbbottAdrian BrownDimitri J PournarasAbd A TahraniPublished in: Current obesity reports (2020)
Evidence for tier 2 (community-based lifestyle intervention) and tier 3 (specialist weight management services) is limited, and how it facilitates care and improve outcomes in tier 4 remains uncertain. Treatment access, rigidity in pathways, uncertain treatment outcomes and weight stigma seems to be major barriers to improved care. More emphasis must be placed on access to effective treatments, treatment flexibility, addressing stigma and ensuring treatment efficacy including long-term health outcomes. Prevention and treatment should both receive significant focus though should be considered to be largely separate pathways. A simplified system for weight management is needed to allow flexibility and the delivery of personalized care including post-bariatric surgery care for those who need it.
Keyphrases
- healthcare
- weight loss
- palliative care
- bariatric surgery
- mental health
- physical activity
- body mass index
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- public health
- quality improvement
- pain management
- insulin resistance
- affordable care act
- skeletal muscle
- early onset
- patient safety
- body weight
- health insurance
- childhood cancer
- smoking cessation