Title: Nutrition and Physical Activity Counseling
1Nutrition and Physical Activity Counseling
- ICM2
- November 23, 2004
- Gary Wheeler, M.D.
Arlo Kahn, M.D. - Pediatrics
Family and Preventive Medicine
2UAMS Nutrition Curriculum
- Freshman year
- Supermarket Tour (ICM1)
- Paired Nutrition Assessment
- Introduction to Preventive Nutrition (ICM1)
- Preventive Nutrition Clinical Correlations
- Hyperlipidemia, Diabetes, Folate (Biochem)
3UAMS Nutrition Curriculum
- Sophomore year
- The Obesity Epidemic (ICM 2)
- Introduction to Counseling (ICM 2)
4UAMS Nutrition Curriculum
- Junior year
- Cardiovascular Disease and Nutrition (Family
Practice Clerkship) - Pediatric Nutrition Skills (Pediatric Clerkship)
5UAMS Nutrition Curriculum
- Senior year
- Nutrition and prevention updates (Block 10)
6Objective
- Learn how to counsel a patient to improve diet
and physical activity in a manner that is
effective, minimizes frustration, shows respect
for the patient and maintains good communication
7Virginia Winston
- Ms Winston is a 51 year old nurse who came in 3
weeks ago and saw a doctor for her sinus
infection. That doctor was not her PCP and
referred her to her PCP, Dr. DeMentaux for a
health maintenance visit and follow-up of her
sinus infection. He also had her come in last
week for a fasting lipid profile and blood
glucose.
8- Lab
- Total Cholesterol 270
- LDL 175
- HDL 30
- Fasting Glucose 125
- Todays vital signs
- Weight 195
- Height 54
- Blood Pressure 150/95
- BMI 33.54
9And now Dr. DeMentaux will demonstrate how to
counsel Ms. Winston to improve her lifestyle and
reduce her reduce CHD risk!
10- Is Dr. DeMentauxs advice likely to help Ms.
Winston?
11By the end of the counseling session, Dr.
Dementaux should have
- known Ms. Winstons diet and habits
- known whether she is interested in changing any
aspect of her lifestyle - known whether she is ready to implement a weight
loss plan in the next month - appropriately counseled her regarding her risks,
diet, and lifestyle
12A Quick Guide to Lifestyle CounselingThe 5A
Technique
13The 5-A Technique
- ASK
- ADVISE
- ASSESS
- ASSIST
- ARRANGE
14ASK
- Would the patient would benefit from changes in
nutrition or physical activity?
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16ASK
- Would the patient would benefit from changes in
nutrition or physical activity? - If yes, perform diet, habit, and nutrition
assessments
17Diet and Habit Assessment
A F F E C T S
18The 5-A Technique
- ASK
- ADVISE
- ASSESS
- ASSIST
- ARRANGE
19ADVISE
- Advise patient to change the behavior
- Make it personally relevant
- Make it brief
- Id advise you to change this
- behavior because. . .
- the risks of behavior
- benefits of changing behavior
20Advice Example Physical Activity
you should get 30 minutes of physical activity
most days because you have several risks for
CHD and physical activity can lower all of these
risks (Obesity, High LDL Cholesterol, Low HDL
Cholesterol, Diabetes, Hypertension, risk of MI)
21Possible Dietary Advice
- Calories to maintain ideal body weight
- Less than 30 of calories from fat
- Low saturated and trans fat (as low as possible
below 10 of calories) - 20-35 grams of fiber/day
- At least 5 fruits and vegetables/day
- lt 2.5 grams sodium (6 grams salt)/day
- 0.4 mg of folate and 1200 mg of calcium/day
- Less than 2 alcohol drinks/d (1 for women)
22The 5-A Technique
- ASK
- ADVISE
- ASSESS
- ASSIST
- ARRANGE
23Assess
- Patients Readiness to Change
- Pre-contemplation (not interested)
- Contemplation (within 6 months)
- Preparation (within a month)
- Action (working on it)
- Maintenance
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25The 5-A Technique
- ASK
- ADVISE
- ASSESS
- ASSIST
- ARRANGE
26Assist
- How to assist depends upon readiness to change
and barriers to change
27Pre-contemplation (not interested)
- ASSISTANCE
- Offer educational material
- Invite future inquires
28Contemplation, Preparation, Action, Maintenance
- ASSISTANCE
- 1. Identify barriers to change
- 2. Address barriers
- Provide educational materials
- Inform of programs available in the community
- Offer referral as needed for intensive
counseling
29Barriers to Change
-
- Typical barriers might include
- Hunger or withdrawal symptoms
- Fear of failure
- Lack of support (family, friends, co-workers)
- Depression
- Unrealistic goals
- Environmental barriers
- Financial concerns
30Barriers to Change
- Solutions might include
- Problem solving
- Support groups
- Psychotherapy
- Medication
31Educational Materials
32Support Programs
33Referral
- Psychotherapist
- Personal trainer
- Group program
- Health educator
- Dietician
34Counseling Services that can be Provided by
Dieticians
- Detailed diet assessment, including readiness to
change and barriers to change - In depth dietary counseling (counting calories,
choosing healthier foods, shopping, motivational
tools, food models, etc.) - Frequent follow-up
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36The 5-A Technique
- ASK
- ADVISE
- ASSESS
- ASSIST
- ARRANGE
37ARRANGE FOLLOW-UP
- During current visit
- schedule follow up (generally within 2 weeks)
- At the follow-up visit
- find out how patient is doing
- recycle patients who have restarted unhealthy
behavior or are having problems
38Counseling to modify lifestyleThe 5As
- Ask assess risks
- Advise give brief advice to change (all
patients!) - Assess determine stage of readiness to change
- Assist
- provide materials
- identify and address barriers and/or make
referrals if ready - Arrange follow-up to improve compliance
39And now Dr. PreVentaux will demonstrate how to
counsel Ms. Winston to improve her lifestyle
40 What are this patients diet and lifestyle
habits?
41Diet and Habit Assessment
42What is Ms. Winstons stage of readiness to
change her diet?
- 1. Pre-contemplation
- 2. Contemplation
- 3. Preparation
- 4. Action
- 5. Maintenance
43What is Ms. Winstons stage of readiness to
increase physical activity?
- 1. Pre-contemplation
- 2. Contemplation
- 3. Preparation
- 4. Action
- 5. Maintenance
44What is Ms. Winstons stage of readiness to quit
smoking?
- 1. Pre-contemplation
- 2. Contemplation
- 3. Preparation
- 4. Action
- 5. Maintenance
45Is Dr. PreVentauxs advice likely to help Ms.
Winston lose weight?
46Treating Obesity Without Frustration
- Define success generously
- Use a systematic approach 5As
- Assess readiness to change
- Assess barriers to change
- Use appropriate tools to assess motivation
- Address obstacles creatively
- Determine whether referral is appropriate and to
whom patient should be referred - Frequent follow-up for patients in preparation,
action, or maintenance
47Counseling Overweight Children
- Step 1 Calculate BMI
- Step 2 Determine BMI Percentile
- Step 3 Interpret the Risk
- Step 4 Choose a course of action
ARKANSAS CLINICIANS GUIDE TO WEIGHT PROBLEMS IN
CHILDREN AND ADOLESCENTS
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49http//www.bcm.tmc.edu/cnrc/bodycomp/bmiz2.html
50- At Risk of Overweight
- Patients with a personal or family history of
co-morbidities need full evaluation for
overweight - If no history of co-morbidities, encourage
healthy lifestyle and follow up in 1 year to
recheck BMI
51- Overweight
- Needs full evaluation and treatment for overweight
52Assess Overweight
- Age first noted
- Perceived causes by child and parent
- Prior weight loss attempts
- Time in sedentary activities (TV, video games,
computer) - Time in physical activity (sports, walking,
outdoor play) - Body image, family stress and any depressive
symptoms
53Assess Co-Morbidities
- Family History obesity, diabetes,
hyperlipidemia, HTN, MI, stroke - PMH chronic diseases
- ROS sleep apnea, worsening asthma, exercise
intolerance, reflux, limb pain, emotional
difficulties, menstrual irregularities
54Assess Diet
- Milk/dairy (should be 3-5 servings a day of skim
or 1) - Fruits and vegetables (should be 5-9 servings a
day) - Intake of soft drinks and fruit and sugar drinks
- Fast food consumption
- Food behavior (large portions, skipping meals,
eating while watching TV, high calorie snacking,
binge eating)
55- Physical Examination
- Body habitus, BP (age appropriate), chest,
extremities, acanthosis nigricans, thyromegaly,
striae - Labs
- Cholesterol panel
- Consider fasting glucose if FHx of type 2
diabetes or signs of insulin resistance - Other lab based on individual findings
56Clinical Pearls
- First goal is no further weight gain. Children
may "grow into" their weight as their height
increases. - Increase fruits and vegetables, use skim or 1
milk. Decrease sugared drinks, candy, junk and
fast foods. - Turn off the TV while eating. Remove unhealthy
snacks from view. Put out fruits and vegetables.
Regular meal times including breakfast. Childs
fist-size portions only. Limit snacking to
healthy foods.
57- Encourage anything that increases breathing and
heart rate (brisk walking, bicycling, dancing,
other sports). Work up to one hour a day. - Set limits on TV, video, and computer time (2
hrs/day total). - Self-monitoring is one of the most helpful tools.
Have them record physical activity and diet,
weigh every 2-4 weeks. Review records when
patient comes back and give praise and/or problem
solve.
58- Parents should act as role models, play with
children, and eat meals together at the table at
home. - If child continues to have inappropriate weight
gain, reassess for compliance or the presence of
emotional problems. - Consider referral for problems beyond your scope
of management such as co-morbidities, possible
abuse or severe psychopathology
59Counseling Practice Session
- Objectives
- Determine the patients stage of readiness to
change - Provide brief, personalized advice explaining the
behavior that should be changed and why - Assist the patient in a manner that is
appropriate for the stage of readiness to change
60Counseling Practice Session
- Logistics
- 4 cases
- For each case, one student role plays patient
(script available) - Two students role play physician (may tag team
and or use time in-time out) - Educational handouts will be available on
physical activity, diet, and smoking - Clinicians guide is available for content on the
pediatric case
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