Publication

Article

Pharmacy Times

September 2012 Oncology
Volume79
Issue 9

Online Interventions May Help Treat Obesity

Online or computer-based weight management programs have the potential to treat obesity in a cost-effective manner, according to a Cochrane systematic review published online on August 15, 2012. The review was based on 14 studies of weight loss that included a total of 2537 participants and 4 studies of weight management that included a total of 1603 participants.

At 6 months, computer-based interventions led to an average of 1.5 kg more weight loss than minimal interventions in 2 weight loss trials, but to an average of 2.1 kg less weight loss than in-person interventions in 1 weight loss trial. Likewise, at 6 months, computer-based interventions led to an average of 0.7 kg less weight regain in 2 weight management studies, but to a (not statistically significant) average of 0.5 kg more weight regain than infrequent in-person treatment in 2 weight management trials. (Minimal interventions involved handing out weight loss or weight management pamphlets or providing usual care.)

The review authors note that, although computer-based interventions may be less effective than in-person interventions, computer-based interventions have the potential to reach far more patients at lower cost and therefore should be considered as treatment options.

Related Videos
Woman professional nutritionist checking dietary supplements in hand, surrounded by a variety of fruits, nuts, vegetables, and dietary supplements on the table - Image credit: amenic181 | stock.adobe.com
Ozempic, obesity, drug shortage, media portrayal | Image Credit: zimmytws - stock.adobe.com
Image credit: Goffkein | stock.adobe.com
lexiconimages - stock.adobe.com
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-WCvWaAcC8
Child being measured by physician | Image credit: Africa Studio - stock.adobe.com
Women applying weight loss medication | Image credit: Mauricio - stock.adobe.com