Training Healthcare Professionals to Deliver a Group‐Based Intervention for People Living With Severe Obesity: Lessons From the PROGROUP Feasibility Trial
Shokraneh Moghadam, Mark Tarrant, Lily Hawkins, Dawn Swancutt, Rod Sheaff, Laura Hollands, Raff Calitri, Jonathan Pinkney, Jenny Lloyd

TL;DR
This study shows how to train healthcare professionals to run group-based weight management programs for people with severe obesity, focusing on improving training accessibility and effectiveness.
Contribution
The paper introduces a flexible, self-directed training approach for healthcare professionals to deliver group-based obesity interventions effectively.
Findings
Facilitators delivered 68% of the intervention content as intended across patient cohorts.
Training adaptations included self-directed learning to improve accessibility and fidelity.
Flexible training formats can balance practitioner needs with intervention requirements.
Abstract
Group‐based programmes are increasingly adopted to support people living with obesity, as they have the potential to reduce staff time and costs and enhance motivation and capability for behaviour change. Group‐based programmes could also provide members with opportunities to form meaningful social connections. As such, training should equip healthcare professionals to deliver group interventions successfully and be accessible and feasible for them to complete. This study presents how mixed‐methods process evaluation data from the feasibility randomised controlled trial of PROGROUP (a group‐based weight management intervention for people living with severe obesity) informed optimisation of the PROGROUP training programme. Five healthcare professionals (facilitators) from three specialist weight management services across the United Kingdom participated in a 4‐day remote training…
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Taxonomy
TopicsObesity and Health Practices · Health Policy Implementation Science · Diabetes Management and Education
