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Preferences of overweight and obese patients for weight loss programs: a discrete-choice experiment Cover

Preferences of overweight and obese patients for weight loss programs: a discrete-choice experiment

Open Access
|Sep 2013

Abstract

Introduction: Obesity is associated with increased risk of morbidity and mortality and also appears to have an adverse effect on health-related quality of life. Though advances in obesity therapy and rehabilitation can be observed, the long-lasting outcome is dissatisfying to most of the patients and therefore the whole healthcare system.

Theory and Methodology: The study aims to identify key attributes of coordinated weight loss programs and elicit patients’ preferences for overweight and obesity therapy in rehabilitation programs. A self-administered survey measuring attitudes and preferences was conducted in Germany in 2009. Discrete-Choice Experiment scenarios were developed using a fractional factorial design and results analysed using a random effects logit model.

Results: N=110 patients completed the questionnaire, 51.82% of these were male, the mean age was 53.05 years and mean BMI was 33.54 kg/m² (SD 7.73). 823 choices could be included in the final estimation. The most important aspects for the respondents’ selection were care coordination (coefficient 1.473;SE 0.185) and individual therapy (coefficient 1.446;SE 0.188). The aspect ‘infrastructure of care’ (coefficient 0.570; SE 0.175) was less relevant. All attributes led to significant coefficients.

Conclusion: Patients value coordination of care and individual therapy most highly. So weight reduction therapy should enable patients to receive a structured, coordinated and interpersonal therapy that is tailored to their personal needs, behaviour and circumstances. Patients are willing to forego infrastructure quality in favour of better coordination and structure in their therapy.

 

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/ijic.1113 | Journal eISSN: 1568-4156
Language: English
Submitted on: Nov 23, 2012
Accepted on: Jul 7, 2013
Published on: Sep 20, 2013
Published by: Igitur publishing
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 4 issues per year

© 2013 Axel Mühlbacher, Susanne Bethge, published by Igitur publishing
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.