Perceived Barriers in the Decision for Bariatric and Metabolic Surgery: Results from a Representative Study in Germany.
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2019
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Abstract
Attitudes of the general public may be an influencing factor for low surgery rates: When skepticism is high, support for individuals wanting or needing to undergo surgery may diminish. This study assesses the relevance of barriers to metabolic surgery.The study was conducted using a representative sample of the German population (nβ=β1007). Participants were asked to imagine that they would have to decide for or against metabolic surgery and rate how this decision would be influenced by a number of reasons given to them (Likert scale). Results are presented by weight status.The barrier found most irrelevant is that surgery could be considered cheating across all weight groups. About a fourth of the sample state that not knowing enough about surgery (28.5%), being afraid of surgery (28.3%), and potential negative consequences after surgery (24.5%) are reasons against metabolic surgery that were rated extremely relevant. Having obesity was a significant predictor of endorsement in two variables: feeling like cheating (lower probability for relevance, ORβ=β0.58, pβ=β0.025) and a lack of knowledge (lower probability for relevance, ORβ=β0.59, pβ=β0.031).In summary, the public's view of weight loss surgery lacks information about post-surgical consequences. It is important to address these points in the public and in social networks of patients as they may be pre- or antecedent of surgery stigma.Reference Key |
lucksikorski2019perceivedobesity
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Authors | Luck-Sikorski, C;Jung, F;Dietrich, A;Stroh, C;Riedel-Heller, S G; |
Journal | obesity surgery |
Year | 2019 |
DOI | 10.1007/s11695-019-04082-1 |
URL | |
Keywords | Keywords not found |
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