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100

In the US, primary care shifted from _______ to _________ late in the 20th century and in the 21st century

  1. largely acute care 

  2. preventive and chronic/routine care

100

How do patients pressure physicians to change their recommendations?

  1. Through social interaction in the clinic, patients convey their preferences, fears, experiences (and priorities) in ways that can pressure physicians. 

  2. In chronic care, they can influence a non-prescription

100

This intrinsic factor (that can interact with the environment) explains only a part of the obesity epidemic



Genes/genetics



100

Physicians are most likely to talk productively about weight in this context



When there is a clear link between a chronic condition and weight



100

Speer & McPhilips find that gender clinic physicians bring up weight in one of these three ways



Announcing/telling, asking, and deducing



200

What are the two key players in causing disease according to the Moldanado book?

  1. The individual (and that person’s attributes and genetics)

  2. The environment (physical, chemical, psychological etc)

200

Bergen finds that patients are much more likely to accept lifestyle advice from physicians when it is presented in this manner

Treatment-implicative

200

This California measure on property taxes ended up impacting school cafeterias and PE classes


Proposition 13



200

This happens when physicians tell patients to lose weight



Patients are more likely to try to lose weight and/or actually lose weight



200

Doing this while patients are presymptomatic seems to be the best way to talk about weight (hint: mention two things!)



Medicalizing weight and making concrete/personalized recommendations



300

What are some risks that can and cannot be modified? 



Lifestyle & other choices (can modify); Genetic predisposition (cannot)



300

These are the three intentional bases of patient resistance, and these are the way that physicians respond to each basis


Preference & pressuring; fear & coaxing; experience & accommodating

300

Title IX, while groundbreaking and transformative, had this effect on physical education in public schools

Reduced youth physical activity in public schools

300

Unlike our other epidemics, this is the reason why the obesity epidemic comes about



People don’t necessarily want to talk about the problem or a treatment



300

This is generally inversely related to physical activity, and is especially problematic for children and adolescents 



Screen time



400

What are the 4 stages of disease progression? At which stage do physicians tend to intervene?  

  1. Susceptibility (lifestyle risk factors, genetics)

  2. Pre-symptomatic (screening tests can see but not visible otherwise)

  3. Symptomatic (we feel it) -- physicians rarely intervene before stage 3 or 4

  4. Disability (affects our ability to live our life as we wish)

400

These are unintentional bases of resistance, and this is how physicians can respond to them in general


Forgetting, running out of prescription, incompatible lifestyle. Physicians can work to identify solutions to these to overcome them

400

Critser implicates these two food additives/ingredients in the obesity epidemic



High fructose corn syrup and palm oil



400

These are the four themes that Ward et al find in their study with obese African Americans



Study participants (1) do not like the term “obese,” (2) care about the physicians manner and timing in bringing up weight, (3) recognize the importance of a personalized approach, and (4) have mixed feelings on the effectiveness of scare tactics



400

We consider obesity to be a health crisis rather than a simple change because...



...it plays a role in so many chronic diseases



500

What is the structure of the chronic care visit? What role do patients play in each phase?

  1. Opening - Patients can focus on how things are going very well or not well to set up a treatment change

  2. Medication/Symptoms/Test Review - Patients can focus on how things are going very well or not well to lobby for or against a treatment change or justify non-adherence

  3. Counseling (treatment changes or no changes) - Patients can resist. In chronic care we see different bases

500

This best explains the root of the deviant cases found in Stivers & Timmermans’ study of parents who resist treatment recommendations for their children with epilepsy

Physicians perceive the parents/patients to be stepping on their toes/questioning their medical authority

500

In the studies reviewed in lecture, ______ report willing to talk about weight in primary care visits while _____ believe that the other party is not interested in doing so


Patients; physicians

Note: this doesn’t mean that patients don’t intentionally or unintentionally discourage physicians from talking to them about their weight! 

500

Gray et al conclude this about doctor’s use of structured versus opportunistic strategies when discussing weight with patients



Both can be utilized successfully



500

These are a few policy changes we can implement to curtail the obesity epidemic 


1. Changing diet and increasing exercise at schools would make a big difference

2. Regulating high caloric foods, sugary drinks etc. including taxing empty calories is a way to preserve choice while disincentivizing unhealthy food choices

3. Providing more options for safe sports and exercise for children, particularly in inner city schools

4. Increasing health education about food, exercise, and food preparation