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The experiences of physical therapists delivering a very low energy diet and exercise intervention for weight loss in people with knee osteoarthritis: A qualitative study

Allison, Kim; Nelligan, Rachel K; Lawford, Belinda; Jones, Sarah E; Hinman, Rana S; Pardo, Jesse; Quicke, Jonathan G; Sumithran, Priya; Prendergast, Jodie; George, Elena S; Holden, Melanie A; Foster, Nadine E; Bennell, Kim L

Authors

Kim Allison

Rachel K Nelligan

Belinda Lawford

Sarah E Jones

Rana S Hinman

Jesse Pardo

Jonathan G Quicke

Priya Sumithran

Jodie Prendergast

Elena S George

Nadine E Foster

Kim L Bennell



Abstract

Background
Exercise and weight loss are core treatments for knee osteoarthritis (OA). While physical therapists are considered well placed to engage in weight management alongside exercise (not replacing dietician care), evidence surrounding physical therapist-delivered weight loss interventions is sparse.

Objective
To understand the experiences and perceptions of physical therapists delivering a very low energy diet (VLED) and exercise intervention to people with knee OA and overweight or obesity in a randomized controlled trial (RCT).

Methods
Qualitative interview study involving six physical therapists (mean age 34 years, median experience 3.5 years) who completed 20 hours of training and delivered a six-month diet+exercise intervention via telehealth to people with knee OA and overweight or obesity in the POWER RCT. Physical therapists participated in semi-structured individual telephone interviews on completion of RCT involvement. Data were audio-recorded, transcribed, and independently thematically analysed by two researchers.
Results
Three themes emerged. Physical therapists felt that delivering a weight loss intervention alongside exercise enabled holistic OA management. Enacting this role within a supportive research environment was considered unique and physical therapists felt the training and resources facilitated care. They felt that, with training, weight loss may be within scope of physical therapy practice for some patients with less complex needs although required alternate models of care including extended consult times, medical or dietician oversight and acknowledging physical therapist supervised weight loss would not be appropriate for all patients.

Conclusion
Findings provide preliminary insight into potential barriers and facilitators to, and acceptability of, physical therapists delivering a VLED and exercise intervention for weight loss in people with knee OA and overweight or obesity.

Citation

Allison, K., Nelligan, R. K., Lawford, B., Jones, S. E., Hinman, R. S., Pardo, J., Quicke, J. G., Sumithran, P., Prendergast, J., George, E. S., Holden, M. A., Foster, N. E., & Bennell, K. L. (in press). The experiences of physical therapists delivering a very low energy diet and exercise intervention for weight loss in people with knee osteoarthritis: A qualitative study. Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy, 29(2), 1-8. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjpt.2025.101172

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Jan 14, 2025
Online Publication Date Feb 8, 2025
Deposit Date Feb 28, 2025
Journal Brazilian Journal of Physical Therapy
Print ISSN 1413-3555
Electronic ISSN 1809-9246
Publisher Elsevier
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 29
Issue 2
Article Number 101172
Pages 1-8
DOI https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bjpt.2025.101172
Keywords extended scope practice, OA, osteoarthritis, physical therapy, weight management
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1076325