2023
DOI: 10.1016/j.pec.2023.107647
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Self-management interventions for adults living with obesity to improve patient-relevant outcomes: An evidence map

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Cited by 5 publications
(10 citation statements)
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“…Regarding the reporting of interventions, we found much missing data on the exact way interventions were designed, the intensity of interventions, and how outcomes in studies were operationalized and measured. These findings are in agreement with the findings of comparable studies in COPD and obesity that were conducted within COMPAR-EU and also found gaps in the reporting of mode of delivery, intensity, location and providers involved and a huge variety in the way these variables were reported across studies [28,29]. This study showed that 20% of the SMIs were tailored, which means that the content of the intervention or the way it was delivered was adapted to the study population.…”
Section: Study Findings In the Context Of Other Researchsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Regarding the reporting of interventions, we found much missing data on the exact way interventions were designed, the intensity of interventions, and how outcomes in studies were operationalized and measured. These findings are in agreement with the findings of comparable studies in COPD and obesity that were conducted within COMPAR-EU and also found gaps in the reporting of mode of delivery, intensity, location and providers involved and a huge variety in the way these variables were reported across studies [28,29]. This study showed that 20% of the SMIs were tailored, which means that the content of the intervention or the way it was delivered was adapted to the study population.…”
Section: Study Findings In the Context Of Other Researchsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…This study showed that 20% of the SMIs were tailored, which means that the content of the intervention or the way it was delivered was adapted to the study population. This percentage is higher than the percentage of tailored studies on SMIs in COPD and obesity, which were below 5% [28,29] and points to the fact that diabetes is generally a precursor in self-management research as compared to other chronic conditions [20]. Tailoring interventions in both design and content is a way to realize more person-centered care [24].…”
Section: Study Findings In the Context Of Other Researchmentioning
confidence: 91%
“…In terms of intervention reporting, our investigation revealed a significant absence of information regarding the precise design, intensity, and operationalization of outcomes. These findings are consistent with similar studies conducted within the COMPAR-EU initiative for chronic conditions like T2DM, COPD, and obesity, which also identified deficiencies in reporting mode of delivery, intensity, location, and provider involvement, along with significant heterogeneity in the reporting of these variables across studies [23,24].…”
Section: Research In Contextsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…However, some studies have been conducted to evaluate the efficiency of self-care management and brain gym interventions in treating different illness diagnoses. The use of self-care management has shown efficacy in mitigating the occurrence of long-term problems among individuals diagnosed with diabetes mellitus [41], heart failure [42][43][44], patient with breast cancer [45], PLHIV [30], obesity [46], and colostomy [47]. In the realm of cognitive health, brain gym has demonstrated efficacy in various domains.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%