
Conversations About the Weight of America's Children: Barriers Which Prevent Healthcare Providers from Discussing Childhood Obesity
Author(s) -
C Blow,
Alisa Allicock,
Carolynn DeSandre,
Chandra Cooper-Samuels
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
journal of human sciences and extension
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2325-5226
DOI - 10.54718/qzss5791
Subject(s) - childhood obesity , overweight , health care , obesity , thematic analysis , health professionals , medicine , nursing , psychology , family medicine , qualitative research , political science , sociology , social science , law
A systematic review of the literature was conducted to identify the barriers that prevent practitioners from identifying and counseling parents and caregivers of overweight or obese children. Once identified, barriers were organized into thematic categories (parental, provider, and professional barriers) and recommendations were generated to facilitate discussion about childhood obesity between professionals and parents. Childhood obesity is a significant public health problem. Healthcare providers must be able to effectively communicate with caregivers and put childhood obesity at the front of healthcare discussions. This article provides a synthesis of the relevant literature and makes recommendations for healthcare providers to overcome the barriers allowing healthier outcomes for children.