Objectives
To investigate if digital approaches can ameliorate the known consequences of social-distancing restrictions in the context of the global COVID-19 pandemic for adolescent participants originally registered for a face-to-face outpatient weight regulation program and whether video-based multiprofessional outpatient obesity therapy is successful for a group of adolescents with preexisting obesity.
Methods
The certified KiCK outpatient training program for children and adolescents with overweight and obesity was remodeled as a consequence of the lockdown traditional face-to-face program to a completely digital and video-based format on short notice. The virtual approach was compared with the results of the conventional program regarding metabolic parameters, body mass index standard deviation score (BMI SDS), well-being, and physical fitness.
Results
Sixty-nine of 77 enrolled participants for KiCK (age 8 to 17 years, BMI z score >2.0) were able and willing to participate virtually. After the first lockdown significant improvements of BMI SDS (mean 0.18; p=0.02), homeostasis model assessment (HOMA) index (mean 1.4; p=0.016), triglycerides (mean 0.18 mmol/dL; p=0.021), 6 minute-walk-test (mean 97.0 m; p=0.030, and well-being according to the World Health Organization 5 (WHO-5) questionnaire (mean 2.5; p=0.002) were found after the virtual intervention, which was comparable to the results observed previously in matched pairs data from the program during the pre-COVID period. After the end of the second lockdown weight SDS, BMI SDS, HOMA INDEX, and cholesterol were also measured reduced compared to baseline parameters measured before program initiation. Walking distance in the 6 MWT and improvement in general well-being in the WHO-5 questionnaire also persisted.
Conclusions
These results indicate good acceptance and efficacy of the video-intervention for youth with overweight and obesity during the lockdown, supporting the use of virtual modules in future programs after the pandemic.
Übergewicht und Adipositas im Kindes- und Jugendalter gehen nicht nur mit ausgeprägten medizinischen und psychologischen Begleit- und Folgeerkrankungen einher, sondern stellen auch aus ökonomischer Sicht eine der größten Herausforderungen für das Gesundheitssystem dar. Die Beschränkungen im Rahmen der weltweiten COVID-19-Pandemie (COVID-19: „coronavirus disease 2019“) führten zu einer weiteren Aggravierung der vorbestehend hohen Prävalenz an juvenilem Übergewicht. Da pharmakologische Behandlungsmöglichkeiten im Kindes‑/Jugendalter im Allgemeinen nicht zugelassen sind und daher keine Option darstellen, spielt die Lebensstilveränderung aus therapeutischer Sicht eine gesonderte Rolle. Dabei haben multimodale Beschulungskonzepte mit Beratungen durch Mitarbeitende verschiedener Fachbereiche (beispielsweise Psychologie, Ernährung, Sport, Medizin) aktuell die besten Erfolgsaussichten. Durch den gezielten Transfer dieser Schulungsprogramme in telemedizinische Konzepte könnten deren Wirkungsgrad nachhaltig verbessert und dabei Ressourcen sowohl auf therapeutischer Seite als auch der der Betroffenen geschont werden.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.