Healthcare Service Providers’ Perspectives on Sociocultural Aspects Affecting Weight Management Activities Amongst People with Obesity in Taiwan—A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Design
2.1. Participant Recruitment
2.2. Data Collection
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Participant Characteristics
3.2. Theme 1: Multilevel Factors Influencing Diets
3.2.1. Individual Level
…a lot of time is spent on solving emotional problems…whenever they face pressure, they can eat 2–3 bowls of white rice and one entire rectangular bar of cake…you know they are definitely, um, psychologically related problems, definitely not, um, physiological needs…But this process is very long because [they] keep on continuing the cycle, then you have to continuously talk to them, how to adjust their attitude, how to think, they may sometimes think of giving up, we have to try hard to encourage them.(Q2)
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- HSP5: dietician, female, private clinic/business.
…. For example, if they have eaten [a healthy lunchbox] before. I will ask them, for example, you, what do you think this kind of lunchbox concept is selling? It’s expensive but it isn’t just the price of the ingredients. It’s not expensive because of the ingredients but the concept…Well, today I do not have a lot of money, and I cannot buy this kind of lunch, then I went to 7–11, how do I achieve lowGI? It’s still possible!(Q3)
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- HSP9: dietician, based in a hospital, 10 years of experience, describing how they would guide PwO on how they can access and assemble affordable meal items mimicking healthy concepts present in the healthy lunchboxes.
3.2.2. Relationship Level
…maybe when she [mothers] goes back home, they will cook all the food really healthily, and then, and then, also have some husbands say “you eat what you cook, is this food edible? It’s so unpalatable, like dog poop!” Like this, then because of the family’s opposition, maybe in terms of her motivation, maybe will be influenced…(Q5)
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- HSP8: nurse, hospital, 20 years of experience.
Police-like family members [who closely monitor you], when you are eating, “You’re eating again, aren’t you losing weight? How can you eat this thing?”, this is called policing. Maybe if your family is nicer, tell them or ask them to say, “Oh, you eat this now…Then let’s take a look”…or maybe say “Are you really hungry?”, “Do you need me to help you see if you want to [know] how to control or something”, that is different, the words and communication words are different, so it’s different on the mentality of the patient.(Q6)
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- HSP7: dietician, based in a hospital, 25 years of experience.
3.2.3. Community Level
…We used to often say that when my patient wants to lose weight, they need a safe environment, but there are a lot of delicacies in Taiwan. Actually, this is very challenging for patients. Especially as Taiwanese cuisine has a lot of street foods [Note: street foods tend to be classified as junk food due to preparation methods and are commonly referred to as a subsection of Taiwanese delicacies]. Then, then this…to our patients, like older patients, in their impression of the food culture, their traditional diet, the traditional diet may be high in oil and sugar, but that is their past dietary experience, which they like, that will also make it difficult for patients to achieve their desired weight loss. But at the same time, these foods also have meaning to them.(Q9)
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- HSP7: dietician, hospital, 25 years of experience.
3.2.4. Societal Level
Then also, the Westerners their diet is basically a plate, they’re like, this is one portion, that is one portion, they are using portions to calculate, this is different in Taiwan. In Taiwan we don’t have this plate habit, we just have a table of dishes, and everyone takes their own bowl and take what they want to eat…after I finish [the small serves of each dish], I grab more, finish eating, then grab more, so later I do not know how much I ate, it’s this kind of [eating] pattern…in the United States MyPlate can be promoted but can’t in Taiwan, but now we are starting to promote it, so what you want to eat, just take all [the dishes you want to eat] together [in one go] and then just stop, you cannot take anymore…a lot [of practices are] not the same…but the things in principle are the same, for example, to have low carbohydrate and high protein those, and so on…(Q10)
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- HSP11: doctor, hospital, 20 years of experience.
…I often hear a person with a BMI greater than 35, often ask us one thing, they ask “Is there such a thing that you can lose weight without too much trouble, something with no need to change anything and then I can just lose weight?”, so that’s probably why there are so many weight loss methods on the internet like they would say that you don’t, don’t have to work so hard, and you can lose how many kilos…For people who want to lose weight, it is a need and desire, yes, but continuously, they actually have not been able to accept that, there is a need for hard work then they would be able to go through the process of losing weight…(Q11)
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- HSP1: dietician, private clinic/business, 8 years of experience.
3.3. Theme 2: Multilevel Factors Influencing Physical Activity
3.3.1. Individual Level
Hmm…a person with heavier weight, just telling them to go into the gym, they, in fact, would be afraid, also [will be afraid of people seeing them], then “I don’t know how to use these things, looks very difficult. I don’t feel like this suits me”. I think that psychological fear…that would be scary, not to mention that towards their body, they still more or less will feel a little, “ah my weight is heavier [than others]”(Q13)
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- HSP6: dietician, hospital, 9 years of experience.
3.3.2. Relationship Level
…because long-term they would develop like, “my habit is now like this, so my family diet is like this, my friend’s diet is also like this, so long term-wise I don’t exercise, then you want me to suddenly have people who exercise in my life”, I think this may be relatively not so easy ah…I have encountered [a patient]…I told her to exercise. She said “Um…but I want to date my boyfriend, my boyfriend doesn’t want to exercise. The two of us want to go eat delicious food, then if I go to exercise, the two of us will have less time to date”(Q14)
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- HSP6: dietician, hospital, 9 years of experience.
3.3.3. Community Level
[A patient] said, because many people told her to exercise. Many medical staff told her she must go, go to the gym to exercise, but she told me “it’s not that I don’t want to”…she felt very sad…because she said, [the gym] equipment is not for people more than one hundred kilograms, they’ll get injured…[I suggest she] do some exercises at home first. Then you go to the rehabilitation physician and ask them to teach you some steps. Then you can do it yourself. So, she later went to download some very simple body exercises from YouTube and they did it at home(Q16)
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- HSP9: dietician, based in hospital, 10 years of experience.
3.3.4. Societal Level
I don’t know if it is the same as the early days of Taiwan, like my parents’ era…For them, there isn’t say any leisure to exercise. They feel like sports is recreational entertainment, which isn’t something that is necessary in life. In life, it’s just, go to work, come back, rest, and prepare for tomorrow, go to bed, go to work tomorrow(Q18)
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- HSP6: dietician, based in hospital, 9 years of experience.
3.4. Theme 3: Multilevel Factors Contributing to Inadequate Quality Sleep
…most people sleep after midnight, or even 1 [am] eh!…then it will definitely affect your hormones, and on the other hand, people now have a lot of pressure in life, lots of work pressure, and also-, or bad long-term living habits, which leads to sleep quality getting worse and worse. And with our clinic’s experience, the most difficult to adjust is sleep…I do not know if it’s life stress or bad lifestyle habits, that is, that is, fiddling around or [thinking] “I think twelve o’clock is too early to sleep eh”…(Q19)
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- HSP5: dietician, private clinic/business, 9 years of experience.
Is it work? Home? Or is it your personal emotions? Or if it’s just due to breaking up and so on, then they will say it themselves. Then if you want to go a little deeper, to be honest, I really can’t help much?!(Q21)
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- HSP10: dietician, private clinic/business, 2.5 years of experience.
4. Discussion
4.1. Interconnected Multilevel Barriers to Weight Management
4.2. Limitations, Barriers, Disinterest, and a Disinclination towards Physical Activity
4.3. Multilevel Factors Influencing Diets
4.4. Multilevel Factors Influencing Sleep
4.5. The Need to Address Psychosocial and Psychological Aspects Impacting on Weight Management
4.6. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Healthcare Service Provider | Occupation | Gender | Location of Practice | Years of Experience with Individuals with Obesity |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Dietician | Female | Private clinic/business | 8 |
2 | Dietician | Male | Private clinic/business | 2.5 |
3 | Dietician | Female | Hospital | 5 |
4 | Nurse | Female | Hospital | 13 |
5 | Dietician | Female | Private clinic/business | 9 |
6 | Dietician | Female | Hospital | 9 |
7 | Dietician | Female | Hospital | 25 |
8 | Nurse | Female | Hospital | 20 |
9 | Dietician | Female | Hospital | 10 |
10 | Dietician | Female | Private clinic/business | 2.5 |
11 | Doctor | Male | Hospital | 20 |
12 | Dietician | Female | Private clinic/business | 3 |
13 | Nurse | Female | Hospital | 25 |
14 | Doctor | Male | Private clinic/business | 23 |
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Leu, J.; Huang, K.-C.; Chen, P.-R.; Pan, W.-H. Healthcare Service Providers’ Perspectives on Sociocultural Aspects Affecting Weight Management Activities Amongst People with Obesity in Taiwan—A Qualitative Study. Nutrients 2024, 16, 1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16101540
Leu J, Huang K-C, Chen P-R, Pan W-H. Healthcare Service Providers’ Perspectives on Sociocultural Aspects Affecting Weight Management Activities Amongst People with Obesity in Taiwan—A Qualitative Study. Nutrients. 2024; 16(10):1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16101540
Chicago/Turabian StyleLeu, Jodie, Kuo-Chin Huang, Pey-Rong Chen, and Wen-Harn Pan. 2024. "Healthcare Service Providers’ Perspectives on Sociocultural Aspects Affecting Weight Management Activities Amongst People with Obesity in Taiwan—A Qualitative Study" Nutrients 16, no. 10: 1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16101540
APA StyleLeu, J., Huang, K. -C., Chen, P. -R., & Pan, W. -H. (2024). Healthcare Service Providers’ Perspectives on Sociocultural Aspects Affecting Weight Management Activities Amongst People with Obesity in Taiwan—A Qualitative Study. Nutrients, 16(10), 1540. https://doi.org/10.3390/nu16101540