Physicians' attitudes about obesity and their associations with competency and specialty: a cross-sectional study.

Melanie Jay, Adina Kalet, Tavinder Ark, Michelle McMacken, Mary Jo Messito, Regina Richter, Sheira Schlair, Scott Sherman, Sondra Zabar, Colleen Gillespie
Author Information
  1. Melanie Jay: Division of General Internal Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, New York, NY, USA. jaym01@med.nyu.edu

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Physicians frequently report negative attitudes about obesity which is thought to affect patient care. However, little is known about how attitudes toward treating obese patients are formed. We conducted a cross-sectional survey of physicians in order to better characterize their attitudes and explore the relationships among attitudes, perceived competency in obesity care, including report of weight loss in patients, and other key physician, training, and practice characteristics.
METHODS: We surveyed all 399 physicians from internal medicine, pediatrics, and psychiatry specialties at one institution regarding obesity care attitudes, competency, including physician report of percent of their patients who lose weight. We performed a factor analysis on the attitude items and used hierarchical regression analysis to explore the degree to which competency, reported weight loss, physician, training and practice characteristics explained the variance in each attitude factor.
RESULTS: The overall response rate was 63%. More than 40% of physicians had a negative reaction towards obese patients, 56% felt qualified to treat obesity, and 46% felt successful in this realm. The factor analysis revealed 4 factors-Physician Discomfort/Bias, Physician Success/Self Efficacy, Positive Outcome Expectancy, and Negative Outcome Expectancy. Competency and reported percent of patients who lose weight were most strongly associated with the Physician Success/Self Efficacy attitude factor. Greater skill in patient assessment was associated with less Physician Discomfort/Bias. Training characteristics were associated with outcome expectancies with newer physicians reporting more positive treatment expectancies. Pediatric faculty was more positive and psychiatry faculty less negative in their treatment expectancies than internal medicine faculty.
CONCLUSION: Physician attitudes towards obesity are associated with competency, specialty, and years since postgraduate training. Further study is necessary to determine the direction of influence and to explore the impact of these attitudes on patient care.

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Grants

  1. 121-191-1077/PHS HHS

MeSH Term

Analysis of Variance
Attitude of Health Personnel
Clinical Competence
Cross-Sectional Studies
Humans
Internal Medicine
New York
Obesity
Pediatrics
Physician-Patient Relations
Physicians
Psychiatry
Regression Analysis
Surveys and Questionnaires

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0attitudesobesitypatientscompetencycarephysiciansweightfactorPhysicianassociatedreportnegativepatientexplorephysiciantrainingcharacteristicsanalysisattitudeexpectanciesfacultyobesecross-sectionalincludinglosspracticeinternalmedicinepsychiatrypercentlosereportedtowardsfeltDiscomfort/BiasSuccess/SelfEfficacyOutcomeExpectancylesspositivetreatmentstudyBACKGROUND:PhysiciansfrequentlythoughtaffectHoweverlittleknowntowardtreatingformedconductedsurveyorderbettercharacterizerelationshipsamongperceivedkeyMETHODS:surveyed399pediatricsspecialtiesoneinstitutionregardingperformeditemsusedhierarchicalregressiondegreeexplainedvarianceRESULTS:overallresponserate63%40%reaction56%qualifiedtreat46%successfulrealmrevealed4factors-PhysicianPositiveNegativeCompetencystronglyGreaterskillassessmentTrainingoutcomenewerreportingPediatricCONCLUSION:specialtyyearssincepostgraduatenecessarydeterminedirectioninfluenceimpactPhysicians'associationsspecialty:

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