Healthcare professionals struggle to tackle childhood obesity due to insufficient training
In the face of the escalating childhood obesity crisis, healthcare professionals are encountering significant hurdles, primarily due to a glaring deficiency in training and operational bandwidth. This predicament was illuminated through a study published in the British Journal of General Practice, wherein researchers from the University of Birmingham conducted thorough interviews with healthcare professionals (HCPs) to delve into their experiences with aiding families in the battle against childhood obesity.
One revealing testimony from the study highlighted the practical challenges faced by HCPs: “I had one mum and her child was overweight, but she was a young parent and she actually didn’t know how to cook the dinners and, yeah… we spent a lot of time with her giving her worksheets, how to cook, make potato and beans rather than going to the fish and chip shop.” This account underscores the multifaceted nature of the obesity issue, which extends beyond medical intervention to encompass educational and lifestyle components.
The research unearthed several themes that have frustrated healthcare professionals in their efforts to support families. Among these was the constrained time and training available to HCPs, compounded by a scarcity of specialist services and limited access to routinely collected data on children’s weight. A poignant concern was the risk of eroding trust by broaching the sensitive subject of weight, alongside the need to navigate cultural sensitivities carefully.
Miranda Pallan, Professor of Child and Adolescent Public Health at the University of Birmingham and senior author of the paper, brought to light the pressures faced by healthcare professionals. “This study brings a fresh awareness about the pressures that healthcare professionals face, including the limitations that they face in trying to provide preventative care for young people,” she remarked, emphasising the barriers to offering effective guidance and support.
Echoing these concerns, Dr Ellen Fallows, a sessional GP with a keen interest in childhood obesity, noted a pervasive reluctance to address the root causes, primarily due to a lack of time, knowledge, and incentives among healthcare professionals. “Everyone thinks it is everyone else’s problem, no one is actually talking about the root causes with parents – which is predominantly food quality,” Dr Fallows observed. She advocated for the wider availability of quality training resources as a vital first step in equipping HCPs to tackle this issue.
The study also touched upon the contentious use of BMI centiles for assessing children’s weight issues, revealing a division among healthcare professionals. Some, including doctors and primary care nurses, admitted to being less familiar with BMI centiles and questioned its suitability for younger children. One participant noted, “We used to use the [height and weight] centile charts and actually the BMI will put a lot more children in an overweight category than the centile charts will.”
The collective insights from this study underscore a pressing need for a strategic overhaul in how childhood obesity is approached within the healthcare system. While the direct teaching of nutritious cooking to families might be beyond the scope of HCPs, the findings advocate for an enhanced support framework, enabling practical advice and referrals to specialist services. As childhood obesity continues to pose a serious, multifaceted challenge, the call for a comprehensive strategy that includes better training, resources, and a unified effort to address its root causes has never been more urgent.