Obesity management in primary care: A joint clinical perspective and expert review from the Obesity Medicine Association (OMA) and the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP) - 2025

Nicholas Pennings , Catherine Varney , Shaun Hines , Bernadette Riley , Patricia Happel , Samir Patel , Harold Edward Bays
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Abstract

Background

This collaboration from the Obesity Medicine Association (OMA) and the American College of Osteopathic Family Physicians (ACOFP) examines obesity management from a primary care perspective.

Methods

This joint perspective is based upon scientific evidence, clinical experience of the authors, and peer review by the OMA and ACOFP leadership. The goal is to identify and answer sentinel questions about obesity management from a primary care perspective, utilizing evidence-based publications, and guided by expert clinical experience.

Results

Obesity is a disease that contributes to both biomechanical complications and the most common cardiometabolic abnormalities encountered in primary care. Barriers that impede optimal care of patients with obesity in primary care include failure to recognize obesity as a disease, lack of accurate diagnosis, insufficient access to obesity treatment resources, inadequate training, insufficient time, lack of adequate reimbursement and the adverse impact of bias, stigma, and discrimination.

Conclusions

Family physicians are often the first line of treatment in the healthcare setting. This affords early intervention opportunities to prevent and/or treat overweight and/or obesity. Patient care is enhanced when primary care clinicians recognize the risks and benefits of anti-obesity medications and bariatric procedures, as well as long-term follow-up. Practical tools regarding the 4 pillars of nutrition therapy, physical activity, behavior modification, and medical interventions (anti-obesity medications and bariatric surgery) may assist primary care clinicians improve the health and lives of patients living with obesity.

Abstract Image

初级保健中的肥胖管理:肥胖医学协会(OMA)和美国骨科家庭医生学会(ACOFP)联合临床观点和专家评论- 2025
肥胖医学协会(OMA)和美国骨科家庭医生学会(ACOFP)的合作从初级保健的角度研究了肥胖管理。方法本联合观点基于科学证据、作者临床经验以及OMA和ACOFP领导的同行评议。目标是从初级保健的角度,利用基于证据的出版物,并在专家临床经验的指导下,识别和回答有关肥胖管理的哨兵问题。结果肥胖是一种导致生物力学并发症和初级保健中最常见的心脏代谢异常的疾病。阻碍在初级保健中对肥胖患者进行最佳护理的障碍包括:未能认识到肥胖是一种疾病、缺乏准确的诊断、无法获得肥胖治疗资源、培训不足、时间不足、缺乏足够的报销以及偏见、污名和歧视的不利影响。结论家庭医生往往是医疗机构治疗的第一线。这为预防和/或治疗超重和/或肥胖提供了早期干预机会。当初级保健临床医生认识到抗肥胖药物和减肥手术以及长期随访的风险和益处时,患者护理得到加强。关于营养治疗、体育活动、行为矫正和医疗干预(抗肥胖药物和减肥手术)这四大支柱的实用工具可以帮助初级保健临床医生改善肥胖患者的健康和生活。
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