新合格医生对肥胖和减肥手术的看法:一项英国多医院调查研究

The Ulster medical journal Pub Date : 2025-09-01 Epub Date: 2025-09-30
Christopher R Smith, Robin Pontonnier, Theodore Patel, Ravikrishna Mamidanna, Michail Chatzikonstantinou
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摘要

背景:肥胖是一个主要的公共卫生挑战,然而在本科和早期研究生医学培训中,关于减肥和代谢手术(BMS)的正规教育仍然有限。基础一年级(FY1)的医生通常负责管理术后肥胖患者,但他们在这方面的信心和准备尚不清楚。本研究旨在评估FY1医生对BMS的信心、知识和认知,确定教育差距,以指导未来的培训。方法:对伦敦东南部7家医院的FY1医生进行横断面调查(2024年8月至12月)。问卷评估了人口统计、管理BMS患者的信心、先前的培训知识以及对肥胖和BMS的认知。结果:77名FY1医生参与。大多数(77.9%,n=60)没有接受过正式的BMS培训,不到一半(42.9%,n=33)有临床接触BMS患者的经历。只有20.8% (n=16)的人对管理这些患者感到舒适,在有临床暴露史的患者中信心水平更高,但没有统计学意义(p = 0.0682)。存在误解,41.6% (n=32)的人认为肥胖是自己造成的,7.8% (n=6)的人认为BMS是一种美容。大多数(84.4%,n=65)支持将BMS教育纳入医学培训。结论:FY1医生在管理肥胖患者方面表现出较低的信心,可能是由于有限的培训和暴露。研究结果强调有必要进行结构化的BMS教育,重点关注围手术期护理,而不是手术细节,以更好地装备未来的医生管理肥胖和减肥手术后患者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Perceptions of Obesity and Bariatric Surgery Among Newly Qualified Doctors: A UK-based Multi-Hospital Survey Study.

Perceptions of Obesity and Bariatric Surgery Among Newly Qualified Doctors: A UK-based Multi-Hospital Survey Study.

Perceptions of Obesity and Bariatric Surgery Among Newly Qualified Doctors: A UK-based Multi-Hospital Survey Study.

Perceptions of Obesity and Bariatric Surgery Among Newly Qualified Doctors: A UK-based Multi-Hospital Survey Study.

Background: Obesity is a major public health challenge, yet formal education on bariatric and metabolic surgery (BMS) remains limited in undergraduate and early postgraduate medical training. Foundation Year 1 (FY1) doctors are often responsible for managing post-operative bariatric patients, but their confidence and preparedness in this area are unclear. This study aimed to assess FY1 doctors' confidence, knowledge, and perceptions of BMS, identifying educational gaps to guide future training.

Methods: A cross-sectional survey was distributed to FY1 doctors across seven hospitals in South-East London (August- December 2024). The questionnaire assessed demographics, confidence in managing BMS patients, prior training knowledge, and perceptions of obesity and BMS.

Results: Seventy-seven FY1 doctors participated. The majority (77.9%, n=60) had no formal BMS training, and fewer than half (42.9%, n=33) had clinical exposure to BMS patients. Only 20.8% (n=16) felt comfortable managing these patients, with confidence levels higher among those with prior clinical exposure but without statistical significance (p = 0.0682). Misconceptions were present, with 41.6% (n=32) believing obesity is self-inflicted and 7.8% (n=6) viewing BMS as cosmetic. A majority (84.4%, n=65) supported integrating BMS education into medical training.

Conclusion: FY1 doctors demonstrated low confidence in managing bariatric patients, possibly due to limited training and exposure. Findings highlight the need for structured BMS education, focusing on peri-operative care rather than procedural details, to better equip future doctors in managing obesity and post-bariatric surgery patients.

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