TY - JOUR
T1 - Weight History in Clinical Practice
T2 - The State of the Science and Future Directions
AU - Kushner, Robert F.
AU - Batsis, John A.
AU - Butsch, W. Scott
AU - Davis, Nicola
AU - Golden, Angela
AU - Halperin, Florencia
AU - Kidambi, Srividya
AU - Machineni, Sriram
AU - Novick, Marsha
AU - Port, Ava
AU - Rubino, Domenica M.
AU - Saunders, Katherine H.
AU - Shapiro Manning, Linda
AU - Soleymani, Taraneh
AU - Kahan, Scott
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 The Obesity Society
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Eliciting a weight history can provide clinically important information to aid in treatment decision-making. This view is consistent with the life course perspective of obesity and the aim of patient-centered care, one of six domains of health care quality. However, thus far, the value and practicality of including a weight history in the clinical assessment and treatment of patients with obesity have not been systematically explored. For these reasons, the Clinical Committee of The Obesity Society established a task force to review and assess the available evidence to address five key questions. It is concluded that weight history is an essential component of the medical history for patients presenting with overweight or obesity, and there are strong and emerging data that demonstrate the importance of life stage, duration of exposure to obesity, maximum BMI, and group-based trajectory modeling in predicting risk for increased morbidity and mortality. Consideration of these and other patient-specific factors may improve risk stratification and clinical decision-making for screening, counseling, and management. Recommendations are provided for the key elements that should be included in a weight history, and several needs for future clinical research are outlined.
AB - Eliciting a weight history can provide clinically important information to aid in treatment decision-making. This view is consistent with the life course perspective of obesity and the aim of patient-centered care, one of six domains of health care quality. However, thus far, the value and practicality of including a weight history in the clinical assessment and treatment of patients with obesity have not been systematically explored. For these reasons, the Clinical Committee of The Obesity Society established a task force to review and assess the available evidence to address five key questions. It is concluded that weight history is an essential component of the medical history for patients presenting with overweight or obesity, and there are strong and emerging data that demonstrate the importance of life stage, duration of exposure to obesity, maximum BMI, and group-based trajectory modeling in predicting risk for increased morbidity and mortality. Consideration of these and other patient-specific factors may improve risk stratification and clinical decision-making for screening, counseling, and management. Recommendations are provided for the key elements that should be included in a weight history, and several needs for future clinical research are outlined.
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U2 - 10.1002/oby.22642
DO - 10.1002/oby.22642
M3 - Article
C2 - 31858735
AN - SCOPUS:85076757962
SN - 1930-7381
VL - 28
SP - 9
EP - 17
JO - Obesity
JF - Obesity
IS - 1
ER -