Provider Counseling and Weight Loss Outcomes in a Primary Care-Based Digital Obesity Treatment

Megan McVay, Dori Steinberg, Sandy Askew, Gary G Bennett, Megan McVay, Dori Steinberg, Sandy Askew, Gary G Bennett

Abstract

Background: Primary care-based digital health weight loss interventions offer promise for addressing obesity in underserved populations.

Objectives: To determine if primary care providers' weight counseling is associated with weight change during a weight loss intervention.

Design: This is a secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial testing a 12-month primary care-based digital health weight loss intervention.

Participants: Participants were community health center patients with body mass indexes of 30-44.9 kg/m2.

Interventions: The weight loss intervention included tailored behavioral goal setting; weekly goal monitoring via text messaging or interactive voice response calls; counseling calls; skills training material; and participant-tailored recommendations for provider counseling.

Main measures: At 6 and 12 months, participants' weight was measured and they reported if their provider delivered weight counseling (general or intervention-specific) at their most recent visit and their perception of providers' empathy. Providers' documentation of weight counseling was extracted from health records.

Key results: Participants (n = 134-141) were predominantly female (70%) and African American (55%) with a mean age of 51 years and BMI of 36 kg/m2. Participant-reported provider weight counseling was not associated with weight change. However, participants whose providers documented intervention-specific counseling at any point during the intervention (n = 35) lost 3.1 kg (95% CI 0.4 to 5.7 kg) more than those whose providers documented only general weight counseling (n = 82) and 4.0 kg (95% CI 0.1 to 7.9 kg) more than those whose providers did not document weight counseling (n = 17). Perceptions of provider empathy were associated with greater weight loss from 6 to 12 months (0.8 kg per measure unit, 95% CI 0.07 to 1.5 kg, p = .03).

Conclusions: Provider counseling that focuses specifically on engagement in a weight loss intervention may enhance weight loss outcomes relative to more general weight loss advice. Counseling that enhances patients' perceptions of empathy may be most beneficial for patients' weight loss.

Trial registration: NCT01827800.

Keywords: community health centers; obesity; primary health care; vulnerable populations; weight loss.

Conflict of interest statement

Gary Bennett holds equity in Coeus Health, LLC, and serves on the scientific advisory board of Nutrisystem, is a member of the board of directors at Girl Trek, and is a past president and a member of the board of directors at the Society of Behavioral Medicine. All remaining authors declare that they do not have a conflict of interest.

Figures

Fig. 1
Fig. 1
Frequency of intervention-specific counseling, general weight counseling, and no counseling at 0–6 months and 6–12 months for intervention arm participants. Panel A is frequencies for provider-documented counseling and panel B is frequencies for participant-reported counseling.

Source: PubMed

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