Screening with the SNAQ and early standardized nutritional care improves the recognition of malnourished patients and provides the opportunity to start treatment at an early stage of hospitalization. The additional costs of early nutritional care are low, especially in frail malnourished patients.
Lower serum 25(OH)D concentrations in older persons are associated with a greater risk of future nursing home admission and may be associated with mortality.
Purpose
: In light of the increasing prevalence of overweight and obesity, understanding the experiences, strategies and challenges encountered when trying to achieve substantial, sustainable weight loss is an important area to investigate. We systematically evaluated qualitative studies focusing on the accounts of individuals who have achieved sustained weight loss to create a comprehensive picture of the experience of sustainable weight loss.
Methods
: Included studies were peer-reviewed studies that qualitatively assessed the views and experiences of adults who previously had or currently have overweight or obesity who successfully lost weight and who subsequently maintained or regained weight. The evidence was systematically synthesized, which enabled the formulation of clear themes and recommendations.
Results
: The 15 chosen studies included the accounts of 294 individuals. We found that continuous monitoring and goal setting, driven by sustained motivation and encouraging experiences, while resisting ever present challenges and enduring discouraging experience encapsulates the experience of sustained, substantial weight loss.
Conclusions
: This review aims to provide a comprehensive understanding of the experiences, strategies and challenges encountered when trying to achieve substantial, sustained weight loss. Additional research taking into account findings from this review and others of its kind will enhance the formulation of treatment protocols.
The effect of weight reduction on serum lipids in relation to visceral fat accumulation was studied in 78 healthy obese subjects (40 premenopausal women and 38 men) aged 27-51 years and with an initial body mass index of 30.7±2.2 kg/m 2 (mean±SD). The subjects received a 4.2 MJ/day energy-deficit diet for 13 weeks. Magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess abdominal fat areas before and after weight loss. Weight reductions of 12.6±3.2 kg in men and 11.7±3.8 kg in women resulted in larger reductions in the fasting serum levels of total cholesterol (p<0.05), low density lipoprotein cholesterol (p=0.06), and triglycerides (p<0.01) and a larger increase in the high density lipoprotein cholesterol/low density lipoprotein cholesterol ratio (p=0.05) in men compared with women. Men also lost more visceral fat (p<0.0001), whereas the reductions in the total and subcutaneous abdominal fat depots were similar. In women, viscera) fat loss was significantly related with an increase of the high density lipoprotein cholesterol level, independent of the degree of total fat loss. In men, however, no significant correlations were observed between changes in visceral fat and any of the serum lipids. Comparisons of average changes in obese men and women suggest that visceral fat loss is associated with an improvement of the serum lipid profile. However, correlation analysis does not support a critical role of visceral fat in determining serum lipid concentrations on an individual level, except for an improvement of the high density lipoprotein cholesterol level with visceral fat loss in obese women. rence of several metabolic aberrations of obesity, such as diabetes mellitus and coronary heart disease, are related to body fat distribution.12 A relative predominance of visceral fat in the abdominal region seems to be a more important predictor for these metabolic disorders than is total body fatness.In numerous studies, the influence of weight reduction on changes in serum lipids in obesity has been examined. There have been only a few studies investigating the relations between changes in body fat distribution and changes in serum lipid levels in response to weight reduction.
We assessed the influence of correction for within-person variability (WPV) on the prevalence, awareness, treatment, and control of hypertension. Data were collected from two cross-sectional population-based studies on cardiovascular disease risk factors from 1987 to 1995 among 56,026 subjects aged 20 to 59 years. Correction factors were calculated from an internal reproducibility study among 924 subjects who were examined in 1989 and 1990. The prevalence of hypertension without a correction of blood pressure values for WPV was substantially overestimated (38%), whereas the prevalence of awareness and treatment of hypertension were substantially underestimated (-13% and -28%). The prevalence of control of hypertension did not change much after this correction. It may be advisable to perform a correction for within-person variability to obtain valid prevalence estimates in surveys that only take one or two measurements of blood pressure.
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