Jay Melanie, Kalet Adina, Ark Tavinder, McMacken Michelle, Messito Mary Jo, Richter Regina, Schlair Sheira, Sherman Scott, Zabar Sondra, Gillespie Colleen
Division of General Internal Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2009 Jun 24;9:106. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-9-106.
Physicians frequently report negative attitudes about obesity which is thought to affect patient care. However, little is known about how attitudes toward treating obese patients are formed. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of physicians in order to better characterize their attitudes and explore the relationships among attitudes, perceived competency in obesity care, including report of weight loss in patients, and other key physician, training, and practice characteristics.
We surveyed all 399 physicians from internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry specialties at one institution regarding obesity care attitudes, competency, including physician report of percent of their patients who lose weight. We performed a factor analysis on the attitude items and used hierarchical regression analysis to explore the degree to which competency, reported weight loss, physician, training and practice characteristics explained the variance in each attitude factor.
The overall response rate was 63%. More than 40% of physicians had a negative reaction towards obese patients, 56% felt qualified to treat obesity, and 46% felt successful in this realm. The factor analysis revealed 4 factors-Physician Discomfort/Bias, Physician Success/Self Efficacy, Positive Outcome Expectancy, and Negative Outcome Expectancy. Competency and reported percent of patients who lose weight were most strongly associated with the Physician Success/Self Efficacy attitude factor. Greater skill in patient assessment was associated with less Physician Discomfort/Bias. Training characteristics were associated with outcome expectancies with newer physicians reporting more positive treatment expectancies. Pediatric faculty was more positive and psychiatry faculty less negative in their treatment expectancies than internal medicine faculty.
Physician attitudes towards obesity are associated with competency, specialty, and years since postgraduate training. Further study is necessary to determine the direction of influence and to explore the impact of these attitudes on patient care.
医生经常报告对肥胖的负面态度,这种态度被认为会影响患者护理。然而,对于如何形成对肥胖患者治疗的态度知之甚少。我们对医生进行了一项横断面调查,以便更好地描述他们的态度,并探讨态度、肥胖护理方面的感知能力(包括患者体重减轻的报告)以及其他关键的医生、培训和实践特征之间的关系。
我们调查了一家机构内科、儿科和精神科的所有399名医生,了解他们对肥胖护理的态度、能力,包括医生报告的体重减轻患者的百分比。我们对态度项目进行了因子分析,并使用层次回归分析来探讨能力、报告的体重减轻、医生、培训和实践特征在多大程度上解释了每个态度因子的方差。
总体回复率为63%。超过40%的医生对肥胖患者有负面反应,56%的医生认为有资格治疗肥胖,46%的医生认为在这方面取得了成功。因子分析揭示了4个因子——医生不适/偏见、医生成功/自我效能感、积极结果预期和消极结果预期。能力和报告的体重减轻患者百分比与医生成功/自我效能感态度因子关联最为紧密。在患者评估方面技能越高,医生不适/偏见越少。培训特征与结果预期相关,新医生报告的治疗预期更积极。与内科教员相比,儿科教员的治疗预期更积极,精神科教员的治疗预期更消极。
医生对肥胖的态度与能力、专业以及毕业后培训年限有关。有必要进行进一步研究以确定影响方向,并探讨这些态度对患者护理的影响。