In The News

How to Prescribe Physical Activity in Patients With Obesity

Medscape Medical News: Carla Nieto Martínez

Exercise should no longer be a mere "complement" or a standard recommendation within healthy lifestyle guidelines, say experts. Recent evidence confirms its physiological importance and endorses its beneficial and therapeutic effects on overall health, particularly in the case of obesity and its comorbidities. These findings emphasized the reasons to include exercise prescription in addressing this condition. This conclusion emerged from discussions among experts in Physical Activity and Sports Sciences during the XIX Congress of the Spanish Society for Obesity, where the role of physical exercise as a therapeutic strategy was analyzed from various perspectives.

Javier Butragueño, PhD, coordinator of the Exercise Working Group at the Spanish Society of Obesity, emphasized the need to "reposition" the role of exercise and the message conveyed to the population. "We must move beyond the typical recommendation to 'just walk' and rethink this message. When working with patients with obesity, you realize that, for example, the guideline of 10,000 steps per day makes little sense for those who weigh 140 kg, have been sedentary for a long time, and have not reached 2000 daily steps. Clinically, it becomes evident that current recommendations may not align with the needs of these patients," he said.

Precision Focus

Butragueño highlighted the necessity of shifting the central focus from weight-related variables alone. While weight is crucial, evidence suggests that it should be evaluated along with other strategies, such as nutrition and pharmacology.

"The approach must change to view exercise as a metabolism regulator," said Butragueño. "For specialists, this means educating the population about the need to stay active for overall health. This is a disruptive message because the prevailing idea, almost obsessive, associates exercise primarily with weight loss, a completely incorrect approach that can even be detrimental in some cases."

Butragueño emphasized the supportive role of physical exercise in interventions for these patients. "Data show that it is both an enhancer and a co-adjuvant in strategies that also include psychology and endocrinology. It should be part of the approach to obesity but individualized and phenotyped to give physical activity the necessary dimension in each specific case."

As an example of this adaptability in therapeutic strategy, Butragueño referred to addressing binge eating disorder. "In this case, specialists must acknowledge that sports are a third-line option, always behind the psychologist, who plays a primary role. Exercise is used to enhance the emotions triggered through its practice, considering that many of these patients maintain a very negative relationship with their bodies."

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HHAU x bttn: Medical Supply Platform Webinar

Thursday, February 29 · 2:00 – 3:00 p.m.

Please join HHAC for a webinar with bttn, The Medical Supply Platform. bttn will be showcasing how purchasing is made easy but most importantly how they are lowering costs on your medical supply bill. Come and find out why so many are switching to bttn. 

Google Meet joining info
Video call link: https://meet.google.com/beb-erza-rxm
Or dial: ‪(US) +1 413-340-2463 PIN: ‪596 822 961#
More phone numbers: https://tel.meet/beb-erza-rxm?pin=2106479611043

 

Hospice Comprehensive Assessment Measure Fact Sheet + Hospice Item Set Manual Update

  • The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) posted a Fact Sheet for the Hospice Comprehensive Assessment Quality measure. The document provides clarification on the measure and guidance on how to calculate the Hospice Comprehensive Assessment Measure for your hospice as well as FAQs for the measure. The Comprehensive Assessment quality measure captures whether seven key care processes were conducted upon a patients’ admission to hospice and was first publicly reported on Care Compare in 2018.
  • The Hospice Item Set (HIS) Manual has been updated to remove COVID-19 public health emergency references, revise the Annual Payment Update (APU) penalty to reflect the current four percent (4%), revise the terminology related to the Consensus Based Entity (CBE) and make some date changes.

A Change Table outlining all the revisions is available here.

 

No changes are necessary for hospice operations relative to the HIS.

 

Medical Aid in Dying Waiting Period Would Shorten from 15 days to 48 Hours Under Colorado Bill

Greeley Tribune | By Meg Wingerter

A bill in the Colorado legislature would shorten the mandatory waiting period for medical aid in dying from more than two weeks to two days, opening the option to more critically ill people, but raising concerns for some about rushed decisions.

Colorado legalized medical aid in dying in 2016, when voters passed Proposition 106. Under the law, two physicians must agree that an adult patient is mentally competent to make the decision to die and would have less than six months until natural death. If approved, the person would then give themselves a drug cocktail meant to cause death painlessly.

Under current Colorado law, a patient has to request medical aid in dying twice, at least 15 days apart, before they can get a prescription. Senate Bill 24-068 would shorten the timeline to 48 hours, and allow physicians to waive the waiting period if they believe the patient will die in less than two days.

It would also allow people who aren’t Colorado residents to end their lives under the state’s law, and let advanced practice registered nurses prescribe the drug cocktail. Colorado allows APRNs to prescribe most drugs, but limits medical aid in dying prescriptions to physicians…

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10% of People with Dementia May Actually Have Different Disease, Research Suggests

Becker’s Clinical Leadership | By Ashleigh Hollowell

Certain cases of dementia —  potentially up to 10% — could instead be undiagnosed liver disease and related neurological issues, according to a study published Jan. 31 in JAMA.

Additionally, researchers believe that the 10% of undiagnosed liver disease and brain dysfunction could possibly be resolved with treatment. 

For the study, researchers analyzed a decade of data — spanning 2009 to 2019 — from 177,422 veterans who had a diagnosis of dementia, and looked for a high Fibrosis-4 score, which is a sign of advanced liver fibrosis that can lead to cirrhosis. 

Across the dataset, around 10.3% of patients who did not previously have a cirrhosis diagnosis showed high Fibrosis-4 scores and signs of hepatic encephalopathy (HE), a neurological disorder that is often challenging to distinguish from dementia. 

But, a reversal of symptoms is possible through treatment for metabolic encephalopathies like HE, and researchers suggest clinicians pay particular attention to "the determinants of undiagnosed cirrhosis among veterans with dementia" and use that information to help properly "identify those eligible for screening and subsequent HE therapy."

 
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