Obesity management in Australian primary care: where has the general practitioner gone?
Author(s) -
Elizabeth Sturgiss,
Chris van Weel,
Lauren Ball,
Sarah Jansen,
Kirsty Douglas
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australian journal of primary health
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.524
H-Index - 30
eISSN - 1836-7399
pISSN - 1448-7527
DOI - 10.1071/py16074
Subject(s) - medicine , obesity , population health , health economics , public health , overweight , community health , health care , nursing , family medicine , management of obesity , environmental health , weight loss , economic growth , economics
Obesity is a chronic condition with significant health and economic consequences that requires more effective management in Australia. General practitioners (GPs) currently act as care co-ordinators in line with national guidelines for overweight and obesity. Australian patients indicate that they would appreciate more involvement from their GP in the management of obesity, and this is in line with international findings. Not all patients have access to specialist obesity services or affordable allied health care because of location, cost and time, particularly in rural and remote areas where there is a greater prevalence of obesity. Empowering GPs to use their skills as expert generalists to manage obesity is an option that should be explored to improve access for all individuals. GPs will require evidence-based tools to assist them in structuring obesity management within their own general practice environment.
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