PRACTICAL METHODS FOR THE MANAGEMENT & PREVENTION OF OBESITY By Sandra Ayisi Addo, M.Sc NUTRILINE (Weight Loss & Nutrition Centre) MWIA African & Near East Regional Conference July 8-10, 2015
Obesity
Obesity signage in Accra reads:
Content Clinical management: Assessment & Evaluation of the obese Treatment methods for the obese Prevention methods for obesity A Nutriline weight loss success story
Assessment of the obese individual
An indirect indicator of body fatness Establishes degree of obesity and disease risk Possible limitations for the muscular, elderly Body Mass Index (BMI) assessment BMI = weight (kg)/height(m) 2 BMIClassification < 18.5Underweight 18.5 – 24.9 Healthy weight 25 – 29.9 Overweight >30 Obese height(m) Weigth (kg) What is your BMI?
Waist circumference: independent risk predictor CVD risk factors: absolute risk Comorbidities: absolute risk Patient’s readiness: improves success Other assessments
Tools for assessment
Medical History Nutrition History 24 Hour Recall
Evaluation of status
Evaluation Overweight with comorbidities- treatment Obese with or without comorbidities- treatment Mildly overweight if motivated- treatment
Evaluation High waist circumference with overweight or obesity- treatment Normal weight/mild overweight (not motivated)- Prevention of weight regain and healthy lifestyle counselling
Treatment methods - Lifestyle approach (Diet, PA, BCT) - Pharmacotherapy - Surgery
Weight change Energy intake (food) Energy expenditure (metabolism, activity) Weight change = Intake – Expenditure (the science is simple, the doing it isn’t !)
Lifestyle approach: Diet Structured personalized meal plan Portion control Oil control Diet quality Satiety issues Alcohol water intake
Lifestyle approach: Physical activity Less weight loss Prevents weight regain Improves overall fitness
Lifestyle approach: Behaviour change therapy Skills for overcoming barriers self-monitoring stimulus control problem solving rewards
Patient centred partnership Agree on desired weight goal/rate of loss Agree on behaviour change goals Exercise 30 mins/3x per week Do not eat while watching tv if it promotes over eating Meet with that friend at a non-eating place if association with that friend promotes over eating Weekly review visits by patient
Maintenance program 80% of those who lose weight are likely to regain slowly Involves continued contact with Nutrition professional (short & long term) Successful if regain is less than 3kg in 2 years
Pharmacotherapy- 2 nd tier of treatment Recommended if low response with Diet/PA/BCT An adjunct to Diet, PA, BCT Not for cosmetic weight loss
Surgery – 3 rd tier of treatment Recommended if all methods fail BMI ≥ 40 or ≥ 35 with comorbidities Complications with 1-4% mortality rate Two types: Limits gastric volume (banded gastroplasty) Limits gastric volume plus alteration in digestion (roux-en-Y gastric bypass )
Prevention of obesity
Public health approach to prevention National level Institutional level Family level
Family Level A family based approach for long term effectiveness
Role of mother and the family Mother nurtures foetus & feeds her household The family is the primary source of influence and social learning that shapes eating habits and PA of children Family interventions affect the society, nation and world
An obese person increases risk of obesity of those close to him/her
Family based programs Maternal factors: Gestational weight gain/smoking habits Sound breastfeeding & weaning practices Parental involvement: Reduce screen time Dining dynamics with parental modeling Improve sleep Food environment Feeding control
Promotion of marriage & economic empowerment Working mothers to uphold their role as carers of the home Family based programs
At Nutriline NOW: Obesity treatment Obesity prevention: Our clients apply principles at home Prevention of excessive gestational weight gain FUTURE: Comprehensive family based program
Thank you