Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5875896 | The American Journal of Medicine | 2014 | 25 Pages |
Abstract
Patient motivation leading to improved lifestyle adherence is a key factor in achieving reduction in metabolic syndrome components. These elements can be enhanced via frequent encounters with the health care system. Use of technologies such as mobile and Internet-based communication can increase the effectiveness of lifestyle change in metabolic syndrome, but should not replace personal contact as the cornerstone of therapy. Our ability to derive quantitative conclusions is limited by inconsistent outcome measures across studies, low power and homogeneity of individual studies, largely motivated study populations, short follow-up periods, loss to follow-up, and lack of or incomplete blinding.
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Authors
Nikhil MD, Ilya MD, Serena MD, Patricia MD, Aparna MD, Elaine MS, RN, Neil J. MD,