Chloe Muntefering, MS, OTR/L, is Doctoral Candidate, Department of Kinesiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison;
Beth Fields, PhD, OTR/L, BCG, is Assistant Professor, Department of Kinesiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Am J Occup Ther. 2023 Sep 1;77(5). doi: 10.5014/ajot.2023.050154.
There is a critical need to address the escalating obesity epidemic by examining new methods of care. Adult obesity has historically been addressed through management and maintenance once an individual is clinically diagnosed as obese. Research and practice demonstrate that significant weight loss can be difficult to achieve and even harder to maintain. Despite this, preventive interventions targeted toward adult obesity have been limited in many health care professions, including occupational therapy. As professionals who are skilled in supporting clients' holistic development of healthy habits and routines, occupational therapists are equipped to play a key role in moving health care practices away from a reactive model of care to a proactive one that emphasizes primary prevention. This column identifies how this issue is aligned with occupational therapy's domain and presents potential examples of interventions to support adult obesity prevention.
解决日益严重的肥胖问题的需求迫在眉睫,需要研究新的护理方法。成年人的肥胖问题历来是在临床诊断为肥胖后通过管理和维持来解决的。研究和实践表明,显著减肥是很困难的,甚至更难维持。尽管如此,包括职业治疗在内的许多医疗保健专业的针对成人肥胖的预防干预措施一直有限。作为擅长支持客户养成健康习惯和日常的整体发展的专业人士,职业治疗师有能力在将医疗实践从被动的护理模式转变为强调初级预防的主动模式方面发挥关键作用。本专栏确定了这一问题如何与职业治疗的领域相一致,并提出了支持成人肥胖预防的干预措施的潜在示例。