Limited Number of Physicians Fully Understand the Definition of Obesity; Top Reasons for Not Actively Diagnosing Include 'Not My Specialty' and 'Patient's Personal Responsibility'
Key facts
- Limited Number of Physicians Fully Understand the Definition of Obesity; Top Reasons for Not Actively Diagnosing Include 'Not My Specialty' and 'Patient's Personal Responsibility'
- Kyowa Kikaku and Intage Healthcare conducted an online survey of 110 physicians regarding obesity diagnosis practices. Only 32.7% clearly understand the definition of obesity, with 'not my specialty' and 'patient's personal responsibility' cited as top reasons for not actively diagnosing.
- Source: PR TIMES
- Date: Thu Jun 18 2026 20:01:10 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
Direct answer
Kyowa Kikaku and Intage Healthcare conducted an online survey of 110 physicians regarding obesity diagnosis practices. Only 32.7% clearly understand the definition of obesity, with 'not my specialty' and 'patient's personal responsibility' cited as top reasons for not actively diagnosing.
- Citation
- Limited Number of Physicians Fully Understand the Definition of Obesity; Top Reasons for Not Actively Diagnosing Include 'Not My Specialty' and 'Patient's Personal Responsibility' (Thu Jun 18 2026 20:01:10 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)), PR TIMES
- Source
- PR TIMES
- Date
- Thu Jun 18 2026 20:01:10 GMT+0900 (Japan Standard Time)
AI Summary (NQ-processed)
Kyowa Kikaku and Intage Healthcare conducted an online survey of 110 physicians regarding obesity diagnosis practices. Only 32.7% clearly understand the definition of obesity, with 'not my specialty' and 'patient's personal responsibility' cited as top reasons for not actively diagnosing.
AI Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
- Q: What percentage of physicians correctly understand the definition of obesity?
- A: 32.7% of physicians reported clearly understanding the diagnostic criteria for obesity.
- Q: What are the main reasons physicians do not diagnose obesity?
- A: Top reasons include 'not my specialty,' 'cannot prescribe treatment,' and 'patient's personal responsibility.'
- Q: What were the criteria for physicians included in the survey?
- A: 110 physicians treating 11 specified conditions, not affiliated with major medical societies, working in clinics.
- Q: What percentage recognize the difference between obesity and obesity disease?
- A: 78.2% recognize a difference (32.7% clearly, 45.5% somewhat).
- Q: What was the purpose of this survey?
- A: To understand current practices and challenges in obesity diagnosis and improve clinical awareness.