评估儿童和青少年结构化远程健康肥胖项目的长期有效性:一项回顾性匹配对照研究

Nora Struckmeyer , Torben Biester , Chantal Weiner , Evelin Sadeghian , Cathrin Guntermann , Laura Galuschka , Kisa von Stuelpnagel , Jantje Weiskorn , Kerstin Kapitzke , Karin Lange , Thomas Danne , Rebecca Toenne , Felix Reschke
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童肥胖是一种日益严重的全球健康危机,其原因是饮食不良、身体活动减少和社会心理困扰。COVID-19大流行放大了这些因素,导致BMI上升和健康相关生活质量(HrQoL)受损。远程医疗提供了一种有前途的、可扩展的方式来提供多模式的肥胖护理。本研究评估了结构化儿科远程医疗干预与历史现场治疗的长期有效性。方法本回顾性队列研究分析了在单一学术中心接受治疗的237例肥胖儿童和青少年的数据。在2020年至2022年期间,117名参与者通过远程医疗接受了为期12个月的结构化生活方式干预。历史队列(n = 120; 2017-2019)接受相同的亲自干预。在基线和12个月后评估临床结果;远程医疗组分别在第24个月和第36个月进行随访。主要结局为BMI标准偏差评分(BMI SDS)的变化。次要结局包括身体健康(6分钟步行测试)、胰岛素抵抗(HOMA指数)、血脂、饮食行为(K-FFL)、饮食调节(K-FEV)和HrQoL (KINDL-R)。结果两组在12个月后BMI SDS均显著降低,远程医疗组持续改善36个月(Δ = - 0.18; p < 0.05)。两组患者的身体表现和HOMA指数均有改善。远程医疗参与者在健康饮食行为、认知食欲调节和健康相关生活质量HrQoL方面表现出更大的改善,尤其是在情感和家庭领域。无不良事件发生;依从性超过85%。结论结构化的远程健康生活方式干预治疗儿童肥胖安全、有效、可持续。这些发现支持远程医疗作为临床可行和可持续的儿童肥胖护理模式,认识到体重减轻和体重稳定可能有助于改善长期结果。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Evaluating the long-term effectiveness of a structured telehealth obesity program in children and adolescents: A retrospective matched-control study

Evaluating the long-term effectiveness of a structured telehealth obesity program in children and adolescents: A retrospective matched-control study

Background

Childhood obesity is a growing global health crisis, driven by poor diet, reduced physical activity, and psychosocial distress. The COVID-19 pandemic amplified these factors, contributing to rising BMI and impaired health-related quality of life (HrQoL). Telehealth offers a promising, scalable modality to deliver multimodal obesity care. This study evaluated the long-term effectiveness of a structured pediatric telehealth intervention compared to historical in-person treatment.

Methods

This retrospective cohort study analyzed data from 237 children and adolescents with obesity treated at a single academic center. Between 2020 and 2022, 117 participants received a 12-month structured lifestyle intervention via telehealth. A historical cohort (n = 120; 2017–2019) received the same intervention in person. Clinical outcomes were assessed at baseline and after 12 months; the telehealth group was additionally followed up at 24 and 36 months. Primary outcome was change in BMI standard deviation score (BMI SDS). Secondary outcomes included physical fitness (6-min walk test), insulin resistance (HOMA index), lipid profile, dietary behavior (K-FFL), eating regulation (K-FEV), and HrQoL (KINDL-R).

Results

Both groups achieved significant reductions in BMI SDS after 12 months, with sustained improvements in the telehealth group through 36 months (Δ = −0.18; p < 0.05). Physical performance and HOMA index improved in both cohorts. Telehealth participants showed greater improvements in healthy dietary behavior, cognitive appetite regulation, and Health-related quality of life HrQoL, especially in emotional and family domains. No adverse events occurred; adherence exceeded 85 %.

Conclusion

A structured telehealth lifestyle intervention is safe, effective, and sustainable for pediatric obesity management. These findings support telehealth as a clinically viable and sustainable model for pediatric obesity care, recognizing that both weight reduction and weight stabilization may contribute to improved long-term outcomes.
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