Department of Family Medicine, Adult and Child Consortium for Health Outcomes Research and Delivery Science (ACCORDS), Center on Aging, University of Colorado School of Medicine, Aurora, CO, USA.
Behavioral Health, Walter Reed National Military Medical Center, Bethesda, MD, USA.
J Behav Med. 2019 Dec;42(6):1142-1147. doi: 10.1007/s10865-019-00045-0. Epub 2019 Apr 23.
There is increasing concern that patients gain considerable weight in the year prior to treatment and that outcomes may not reflect true treatment losses. To date, we know little about the accuracy of self-reported weight change prior to treatment. To investigate weight gain, and accuracy of self-reported recent weight history, Veterans (n = 126) reported their current weight and one-year weight history prior to entering treatment. These weights were compared to electronic medical record weights. Patients gained an average of 2.03 kg (4.5 lbs) in the year prior to treatment. Self-report and objective weight assessments showed high concurrent validity at the group level. However, standard deviations for the absolute difference scores revealed high individual variability in historical reporting, suggesting that weight loss seeking patients are inaccurate reporters of recent weight. Our findings have implications for the emerging area of pre-treatment weight gain research and processes for clinical care.
越来越多的人担心患者在治疗前的一年中会体重增加,并且治疗效果可能无法反映真实的体重减轻情况。迄今为止,我们对治疗前自我报告的体重变化的准确性知之甚少。为了研究体重增加以及自我报告的近期体重史的准确性,退伍军人(n=126)报告了他们在进入治疗前的当前体重和一年前的体重史。将这些体重与电子病历中的体重进行了比较。患者在治疗前一年平均增加了 2.03 公斤(4.5 磅)。自我报告和客观体重评估在群体水平上显示出高度的一致性。然而,绝对差值得分的标准差显示出历史报告中个体差异较大,这表明寻求减肥的患者对近期体重的报告不准确。我们的发现对新兴的治疗前体重增加研究领域以及临床护理过程具有重要意义。