Relationship Between Clinician Language and the Success of Behavioral Weight Loss Interventions: A Mixed-Methods Cohort Study: Annals of Internal Medicine: Vol 176, No 11
Background: International guidelines recommend that primary care clinicians recognize obesity and offer treatment opportunistically, but there is little evidence on how clinicians can discuss weight and offer treatment in ways that are well received and effective. Objective: To examine relationships between language used in the clinical visit and patient weight loss. Design: Mixed-methods cohort study. Setting: 38 primary care clinics in England participating in the Brief Intervention for Weight Loss trial. Participants: 246 patients with obesity seen by 87 general practitioners randomly sampled from the intervention group of the randomized clinical trial. Measurements: Conversation analysis of recorded discussions between 246 patients with obesity and 87 clinicians regarding referral to a 12-week behavioral weight management program offered as part of the randomized clinical trial. Clinicians’ interactional approaches were identified and their association with patient weight loss at 1