Obesity Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Impact of a Bariatric Rehabilitation Service on Weight Loss and Psychological Adjustment.
Obesity is a major health problem that is affecting more and more people's lives. One of the
most successful treatments for obesity is weight loss surgery. Not all patients, however,
lose the desired amount of weight, some regain weight and some have the surgery reversed.
Interviews with patients and discussions with patient support groups indicate that many of
the 'unsuccessful' patients feel unprepared for the operation and describe how although the
surgery fixes their body it neglects their mind. They would therefore like to have more
psychological support.
The present study aims to set up and evaluate a health psychology led bariatric
rehabilitation service (BRS) and determine the impact of such a service on patient outcomes
following surgery. The BRS would offer information, support and mentoring pre and post
surgery and address psychological issues such as dietary control, self esteem, coping and
emotional eating. It is predicted that a bariatric rehabilitation service would primarily
improve weight loss following surgery but would also aid changes in other aspects of the
patient's well being.
Obesity is a risk factor for a multitude of illnesses such as heart disease, diabetes and
cancer. If effective, obesity surgery improves a patient's health and reduces their need for
NHS care. If unsuccessful then the costs include not only subsequent NHS costs due to these
other illnesses but also the costs of the unsuccessful operation and the emotional cost to
the patient. The bariatric rehabilitation service should help to improve the effectiveness of
surgery which in the longer term is likely to be cost effective.
This research is a direct response to the needs identified by patients and by offering a more
comprehensive bariatric service the success and subsequent health and well being of obese
patients should be improved.
Design: The study will involve a trial (open randomised parallel group control trial) with
patients allocated to receive either usual care or the bariatric rehabilitation service (BRS)
pre and post bariatric (obesity) surgery. Follow up measures will be recorded at 3, 6 and 12
months post-surgery at routine follow-up clinics. In addition, qualitative interviews will be
carried out with 20 participants from both arms of the trial (BRS n=10; usual care n=10).
Piloting: The contents of the bariatric service and the follow up measures are based on pilot
work. This pilot work has already been completed exploring what bariatric patients want and
why bariatric surgery either fails or succeeds from the patients' perspective. Furthermore,
pilot research has explored the impact of bariatric surgery on changes in mood, cognitions
and eating behaviours. The quantitative measures and qualitative responses derived from these
studies will form the basis of the intervention and the measures for the present study.
Sample: St Richard's Hospital in Chichester, West Sussex offers a NHS based bariatric service
for obese patients with a BMI over 40 (or 35 with serious co morbidities). This is the
largest centre in the UK, with 600 patients per year receiving a bariatric operation at this
clinic (70% being a primary bypass and 20% bands (the remaining 10% are revisions)). Patients
will be recruited if they have been approved for surgery and had their date set for their
operation. The consultant surgeon, Mr Chris Pring is a collaborator on this proposal.
Procedure: Ethical approval will be in place before the start of the project. In the week
before their operation patients attend the bariatric clinic for routine tests. When patients
are sent their appointment letters they will be sent the information sheet along with it to
give them approximately 2 weeks to think about whether they would like to take part. At the
appointment patients will see the researcher who will explain the trial, obtain consent and
randomly allocate the patient to either the usual care condition or the bariatric
rehabilitation service (BRS) condition.
Randomisation: All patients who fulfil the inclusion criteria will be approached by the
researcher, asked to read an information sheet and if interested offered a written consent
form. Once a patient is consented the researcher will contact the clinical trial unit at
Surrey University who will provide third party blinded randomization to either the BRS or
usual care.
Timeline: The study will take 34 months. New patients will be recruited over a 12 month
period and followed up for 12 months postoperatively. The first 6 months will involve
preparation, setting up procedures for data collection and training the health psychologist.
The next 25 months will involve rolling out the intervention, recruitment, randomly
allocating patients to the 2 conditions, providing the BRS and collecting data on the
evaluation of service. At 18 months the 20 interviews will take place and be transcribed. The
final 3 months will be spent analyzing the data, assessing cost-effectiveness, disseminating
the results to patients and health professionals and writing up findings for publication.
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