2019
DOI: 10.2147/dmso.s208884
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<p>Lifestyle intervention for obesity: a call to transform the clinical care delivery system in Mexico</p>

Abstract: Obesity and its comorbidities have become the most important public health problems for Latin America. In Mexico obesity has increased dramatically to the point where the government has declared it an epidemiological emergency. The most recent national data showed overweight and obesity affects 72.5% of adults, or around 56 million Mexicans. Most Mexican adults with obesity are undiagnosed. According to data derived from a national representative survey, only 20% of adults with BMI >30 kg/m2 were diagnosed wit… Show more

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Cited by 10 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…The difference in opinions between HCPs and PwO regarding motivation to lose weight may reflect real‐life experience of HCPs or could represent an unintentional negative bias (23). In Mexico, the barriers to HCPs discussing weight management with PwO could be a contributing factor to the underdiagnosis of obesity (9).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The difference in opinions between HCPs and PwO regarding motivation to lose weight may reflect real‐life experience of HCPs or could represent an unintentional negative bias (23). In Mexico, the barriers to HCPs discussing weight management with PwO could be a contributing factor to the underdiagnosis of obesity (9).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although medical and scientific organizations define obesity as a disease (5,13), the medical care received by PwO is often suboptimal (14,15). Therefore, the strategies adopted to manage the epidemic have not fully incorporated treating obesity as a disease into the daily approach to the problem (9). Evidence-based results regarding the visions, attitudes, perceptions, behaviors, or barriers of PwO and health care professionals (HCPs) about obesity care are warranted to develop patient-centered weight-management programs.…”
Section: Study Importancementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Obesity combined with DM, asthma, immunosuppression, and hypertension, had higher increases in mortality risk than in patients with these comorbidities but without obesity. For COPD, CVD, or CKD combined with obesity, mortality risks were not statistically significantly increased, possibly due to the low number of patients presenting these comorbidities combined (n=24, n=20, and n=11, respectively), which reflects that these comorbidities are often present with more than one concomitant disease in the general population [22][23][24].…”
Section: Sars-mentioning
confidence: 93%