According to a recent study, overweight people are more prone to disagree with their doctors' advice for lifestyle changes and weight loss.

Article from Oxford University Press that was published in the family practise journal, overweight people are more likely to visit the doctor.

Between 1975 and 2016, according to the World Health Organization, obesity rates nearly tripled. That hike is undoubtedly terrific.

General practitioners have a key role in medical treatment for obesity and weight loss. However, they require accurate information and patient cooperation.

A patient's health status is impacted by the quality of the information, mutual understanding, and agreement between doctors and patients.

Patients and clinicians frequently have differing attitudes toward weight. It seems weird to blame their extra weight on something they have no control over.

On the other hand, general practitioners have a propensity to blame behavioural, and thus controllable, issues like diet and exercise.

number of factors affect a patient's weight and health, and these variations in how patients perceive their weight may deteriorate doctor-patient communication.

 The goal of the current study is to determine whether or not patient-doctor interactions are reliable indicators of obesity.

To determine the prevalence of obesity in the country, 585 patients and 27 general practitioners from three regions of France took part in the campaign.

There are huge discrepancies between what the patient and the doctor declare about what they did, learned, and were recommended during the same session.