Free Content Practitioners' views on managing childhood obesity in primary care: a qualitative study

Authors: Turner, Katrina M1; Shield, Julian PH2; Salisbury, Chris1

Source: British Journal of General Practice, Volume 59, Number 568, November 2009 , pp. 856-862(7)

Publisher: Royal College of General Practitioners

Buy & download fulltext article:

Free content The full text is free.

View now:
HTML 51.6kb 
or
PDF 156.3kb 

Abstract:

Background

In 2006 the Department of Health and the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE) published guidance on the management of childhood obesity, for use by primary care practitioners. Little is known, however, about practitioners' views and experiences of managing childhood obesity in primary care.

Aim

To explore practitioners' views of primary care as a setting in which to treat childhood obesity.

Design of study

Qualitative interview study.

Setting

Primary care and other community settings based in Bristol, England.

Method

Interviews explored practitioners' views and experiences of managing childhood obesity and their knowledge of the recent guidance provided by the Department of Health and NICE. Interviews were audiotaped and transcribed verbatim. Analysis was thematic and comparisons made both within and across the interviews.

Results

Thirty practitioners were interviewed: 12 GPs, 10 practice nurses, four school nurses, and four health visitors. Participants varied in their views about whether primary care is an appropriate treatment setting for childhood obesity. However, all described factors that limited the extent to which they could intervene effectively: a lack of expertise, resources, and contact with primary school children; the causes of childhood obesity; and the need to work with parents. It was also apparent that very few participants had knowledge of the recent guidance.

Conclusion

Practitioners do not currently view primary care as an effective treatment setting for childhood obesity and it is unlikely that the guidance from the Department of Health and NICE will have a meaningful impact on their management of this condition.

Keywords: child health; obesity; primary health care; qualitative research

Document Type: Research article

DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3399/bjgp09X472269

Affiliations: 1: Academic Unit of Primary Health Care, University of Bristol, Bristol 2: Bristol Royal Hospital for Children and University of Bristol, Bristol

Publication date: 2009-11-01

More about this publication?
  • The British Journal of General Practice is an international journal publishing articles of interest to family practitioners and primary care researchers worldwide. The journal's 2010 Impact Factor is 2.07, making it the world's second most highly cited journal of general practice and primary health care.

    Recent issues: members of the Royal College of General Practitioners receive complimentary access to the British Journal of General Practice. Access is via the members' login area using your RCGP membership details. All users can freely access articles published up to 1 year ago, and the BJGP archive is available via PubMed Central.

    Email alerts can be enabled by registering with IngentaConnect. For information, see Help for web users.

  • Information for Authors
  • Subscribe to this Title
  • Membership Information
  • BJGP Archive
  • ingentaconnect is not responsible for the content or availability of external websites
Related content

Tools

Key

Free Content
Free content
New Content
New content
Open Access Content
Open access content
Subscribed Content
Subscribed content
Free Trial Content
Free trial content

Text size:

A | A | A | A
Share this item with others: These icons link to social bookmarking sites where readers can share and discover new web pages. print icon Print this page