Publications by authors named "Megan M Oberle"

Background: In adults, poor sleep quality is associated with increased obesogenic eating behaviours; less is known about this relationship in youth. The objectives of this study were to assess the strength of association between fatigue-related quality of life (QoL) and eating behaviours among youth and to describe the associations in participants with percent body fat (%BF) above and below the 90th percentile for sex and age.

Methods: Caregiver-reported measures of fatigue (Pediatric QoL Multidimensional Fatigue Scale) and eating behaviours (Child Eating Behaviour Questionnaire) were obtained from participants aged 8-17 years.

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Lack of food preparation knowledge, time to prepare meals and concerns about fruit and vegetable spoilage before consumption are the potential barriers to home cooking. These barriers may be addressed by meal kits (bundles of recipes and ingredients). We described home cooking barriers and evaluated acceptability of meal kits, using semi-structured focus groups with caregivers and adolescent patients of an outpatient paediatric weight management clinic.

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Obesity is a complex disease influenced by many neurohormonal pathways which regulate body weight toward homeostasis. Presently, the disease of obesity effects over a billion individuals worldwide with scalable treatment options in dire need. Pharmacologic interventions for obesity have been developed to help promote weight loss in individuals with obesity.

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At the time this study was conducted, Dr. Oberle was a Pediatric Endocrinology Fellow at Children's Hospital of Philadelphia and was supported by a National Institutes of Health institutional training grant (T32DK063688). This research was supported by the National Institutes of Health's National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences, grant UL1TR002494.

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It remains largely unknown as to why some individuals experience substantial weight loss with obesity interventions, while others receiving these same interventions do not. Person-specific characteristics likely play a significant role in this heterogeneity in treatment response. The practice of precision medicine accounts for an individual's genes, environment, and lifestyle when deciding upon treatment type and intensity in order to optimize benefit and minimize risk.

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Food insecurity may trigger eating behaviors that contribute to pediatric obesity. The aim of this study is to identify eating behaviors among a pediatric population with obesity and household food insecurity. A cross-sectional study analyzed Child Eating Behavior Questionnaire (CEBQ) and household food insecurity screener responses, and BMI measurements from pediatric participants with obesity (BMI ≥95th percentile) from a weight management clinic between 2013 and 2017.

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Purpose Of Review: This review describes (1) the clinical assessment of pediatric patients with severe obesity, including a summary of salient biological, psychological, and social factors that may be contributing to the patient's obesity and (2) the current state of treatment strategies for pediatric severe obesity, including lifestyle modification therapy, pharmacotherapy, and metabolic and bariatric surgery.

Recent Findings: Lifestyle modification therapy alone is insufficient for achieving clinically significant BMI reduction for most youth with severe obesity and metabolic and bariatric surgery, though effective and durable, is not a scalable treatment strategy. Pharmacological agents in the pipeline may 1 day fill this gap in treatment.

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