Impact of Inpatient Treatment for Obesity in Patients with Comorbid Psychiatric Disorders
Marcia Cristina Almeida Magalhães Oliveira, Carina Marcia Magalhães Nepomuceno, Francielle Maria da Cruz Trindade, Carolina Chacra Carvalho e Marinho, Cristiano Gidi de Portela, Sérgio Oliveira Braga, Neidjane Sholl Pinheiro, Frederico Fidellis Barboza, José Lucas Sena da Silva

TL;DR
This study shows that inpatient obesity treatment effectively reduces weight and BMI in patients with and without depression or binge eating.
Contribution
The study demonstrates that lifestyle-based inpatient treatment is equally effective for obesity in patients with psychiatric comorbidities.
Findings
Treatment duration was positively linked to weight and BMI reductions in all groups.
Patients with depression and binge eating disorder showed significant BMI and waist circumference reductions.
No significant differences in outcomes were found between groups with and without psychiatric comorbidities.
Abstract
Obesity is a global health problem causing millions of deaths from noncommunicable diseases. Individuals with obesity are also at increased risk for mental disorders, such as depression (DEP) and binge eating (BED). The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of an inpatient lifestyle-based intervention program for the treatment of obesity in persons with and without DEP and BED. This is a retrospective cohort study involving patients enrolled in a specialized inpatient hospital facility for the treatment of obesity. Participants underwent a long-term program composed of a low-calorie diet and intensive lifestyle changes. Data from 997 adult patients were included. Participants were divided into four groups: a depression group (DG), binge-eating disorder group (BG), depression and binge-eating disorder group (DBG), and a control group (CG). Anthropometric data were obtained…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEating Disorders and Behaviors · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes · Treatment of Major Depression
