Metabolic Surgery Research Group, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina.
College of Nursing, East Carolina University, Greenville, North Carolina.
J Clin Nurs. 2018 Nov;27(21-22):4018-4027. doi: 10.1111/jocn.14527. Epub 2018 Jul 30.
To explore the experience of postoperative bariatric surgery patients as they adjust to diminished weight and differentiate that adjustment from the more general concept of body image.
Bariatric surgery is an effective way to reduce weight and comorbidities associated with obesity. Complete success requires that patients must adjust psychologically as they lose weight. If this does not occur, bariatric patients may experience a "mind-body lag," in which the patient's internal body image lags behind the external changes. Hermans' Dialogical Self Theory of "I-positions" is a foundation with which to understand this problem.
Descriptive correlational study of postoperative bariatric patients explored the concept of "I-obese" and "I-ex-obese" in an effort to quantify previous qualitative findings and develop a survey questionnaire.
Bariatric patients (N = 55) between 18-30 months postoperative completed one-hour interviews. Cluster analysis and chi-squared analysis compared mean scores and explored the prevalence of "I-positions" and body image concerns in the participants.
Cluster analysis of the survey data identified participants as falling into either "I-obese," "I-ex-obese" or "mixed I-obese" categories. There were significantly higher body image concerns in the "I-obese" participants than those identified as "I-ex-obese." The majority of female participants reported high body image concerns. There was no significant association with weight loss percentage.
This research establishes a connection in this study sample of women who experience body image concerns and prolonged "I-obese" identification 18-30 months after their bariatric surgery.
To date, the primary measure of bariatric surgery success has focused almost exclusively on the amount of weight loss. Implementing psychological as well as physiological care, however, may be the key to full recovery and long-term success. Practitioners can use this new information to plan effective pre- and postoperative psychological preparation and support.
探讨术后减重手术患者适应体重减轻的体验,并将其与更普遍的身体意象概念区分开来。
减重手术是减少体重和肥胖相关合并症的有效方法。完全成功需要患者在减肥的同时进行心理调整。如果不发生这种情况,减重患者可能会经历“身心滞后”,即患者的内部身体意象滞后于外部变化。Hermans 的对话自我理论的“我-位置”是理解这个问题的基础。
对术后减重患者进行描述性相关性研究,探索“我肥胖”和“我已减肥”的概念,努力量化先前的定性发现并开发问卷调查。
55 名术后减重患者完成了一个小时的访谈。聚类分析和卡方分析比较了平均得分,并探讨了参与者中“我-位置”和身体意象问题的流行情况。
调查数据的聚类分析将参与者分为“我肥胖”、“我已减肥”或“混合我肥胖”类别。“我肥胖”参与者的身体意象问题明显高于“我已减肥”参与者。大多数女性参与者报告身体意象问题较高。体重减轻百分比与身体意象问题无显著相关性。
本研究在 18-30 个月后接受减重手术的女性研究样本中建立了联系,这些女性经历了身体意象问题和长期的“我肥胖”认同。
迄今为止,减重手术成功的主要衡量标准几乎完全集中在体重减轻的程度上。然而,实施心理和生理护理可能是全面康复和长期成功的关键。从业者可以使用这些新信息来计划有效的术前和术后心理准备和支持。