Findings
affirm value of physician involvement in changing unhealthy behavior
In a report on the study by Johns Hopkins
researchers, published in the Aug. 21 issue of Patient Education and
Counseling, the researchers say the findings could inform the development
of weight loss programs that give primary care physicians a starring role.
Researchers have long known that high-quality
patient-doctor relationships marked by empathy, good communication,
collaboration and trust are linked to better adherence to medication schedules,
appointment keeping and other good outcomes, says Wendy L. Bennett, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor of
medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and a primary care
physician at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center.
Previous studies also have
shown, she says, that obese patients are more likely to report poor physician-patient
relationships, with evidence of decreased respect and weight bias from providers.
To see whether and what aspects of those
relationships might influence weight loss efforts, Bennett and her colleagues
reviewed information gathered by Johns Hopkins’ Practice-based Opportunities
for Weight Reduction (POWER) trial, a two-year, randomized, controlled study
funded by the federal government.
During the trial, some obese patients worked
to lose weight with the aid of health coaches while their efforts were
supervised by their primary care physicians.
At the end of the trial, patients filled out surveys
that asked, in part, about their relationships with their primary care
physician, including questions about how often their providers explained things
clearly, listened carefully and showed respect, as well as how helpful their
physicians’ involvement was in the trial.
Of the 347 patients who filled out
surveys, about 63 percent were female, about 40 percent were African-American
and all were obese, with body mass indices of 36.3 on average.
Each participant
also had one of three cardiovascular disease risk factors: high blood pressure,
high cholesterol or diabetes.
Results of a review showed that nearly all of the
347 patient surveys reviewed for the Johns Hopkins study reported high-quality
relationships with their physicians, with the overall relationship showing
little effect on weight loss.
However, those patients who gave their physicians
the highest ratings on “helpfulness” during the trial lost an average of 11
pounds, compared to just over 5 pounds for those who gave their physicians the
lowest “helpfulness” ratings.
Current National Institutes of Health statistics
suggest that more than one-third of adults in the United States are obese.
Though Medicare and private insurance reimbursements are low or nonexistent for
physician-guided weight loss interventions, Bennett says, the findings could
spur new reimbursement models that provide for physician involvement and enable
more team-based care models.
“This trial supports other evidence that providers
are very important in their patients’ weight loss efforts,” Bennett says. Many
current weight loss programs are commercially run, she adds, and
patients often join these programs without their physician’s knowledge.
“Incorporating physicians into future programs might
lead patients to more successful weight loss,” she says.
Other Johns Hopkins researchers who participated in
this study include Nae-Yuh Wang, Ph.D.; Kimberly A. Gudzune, M.D., M.P.H.;
Arlene T. Dalcin, R.D.; Sara N. Bleich, Ph.D.; Lawrence J. Appel, M.D., M.P.H.;
and Jeanne M. Clark, M.D., M.P.H.
This work was supported with a grant from the Johns
Hopkins University Osler Center for Clinical Excellence at Johns Hopkins. POWER
at Johns Hopkins was supported by a grant from the National Heart, Lung, and
Blood Institute
Under grant number 5U01HL087085-05. Wendy Bennett is supported
by a career development award from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood
Institute under grant number 5K23HL098476–02. Nae-Yuh Wang is also supported by
grants from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences under grant
number UL1 TR000424 and the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and
Kidney Diseases under grant number P30DK079637.
Other relevant disclosures:
The original trial
involved a collaboration with Healthways Inc., a disease management company.
Healthways provided coaching effort for the transtelephonic intervention and
developed the website used in the intervention.
Healthways provided some
research funding to supplement National Institutes of Health support. Under an
institutional consulting agreement with Healthways, The Johns Hopkins
University received fees for advisory services to Healthways during the POWER
trial. Faculty members who participated in the consulting services received a
portion of the university fees.
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