%0 Journal Article %T Percepci¨®n de la adherencia al tratamiento y descenso del peso corporal en mujeres adultas con sobrepeso y obesidad %A Torresani %A M %A Maffei %A L %A Squillace %A C %A Bel¨¦n %A L %A Alorda %A B %J Diaeta %D 2011 %I Scientific Electronic Library Online %X introduction: the real effectiveness of treatments for obesity depends on how adherent the patient is. objectives: to estimate the correlation between the decrease in body weight and perception of adherence to treatment among adult women with overweight and obesity methodology: experimental design of monitoring. a convenience non-probability sampling of 112 women over 20 years with bmi ¡Ý 25 kg/m2, who attended the nutritional consultation at the foundation for the endocrine and metabolic disease research of the autonomous city of buenos aires, within ubacyt project 2010 - 2012. dependent variable: change in body weight (expressed in % per week and categorized in <1% and ¡Ý 1%) between initial consultation and first control. independent variable: perception of adherence to treatment (expressed in % of compliance with food plans and scheduled physical activity), on a scale of 0 to 100 and categorized into three ranges:¡Ü 50%, 60 to 70% and> 70%. monitoring was carried out taking into account overweight level (bmi 25.0 to 29.9, from 30 to 34.9 and¡Ý 35 kg/m2), age (<40, 40 to 65 and> 65 years) and time between initial visit and control (2, 3 or 4 weeks at the discretion of the patient). we used spss 15.0 establishing measures of central tendency, x2, fisher's exact test and spearman correlation p value <0.05. results: the perception of adherence to treatment self-reported by patients was of 74 ¡À 12%. 47.3% reported an adherence over 70%, while a 46.4% reported an adherence between 60 and 70%. direct relationship was found between weekly weight loss and the perception of adherence (r = 0.351, p< 0,001). there was no association between perception of adherence and age ranges, overweight or obesity and the time between the initial visit and the first control. conclusions: the greater the perception of adherence to treatment, the greater the weight loss per week, having no association with age, bmi, or the time until the first control. %K adherence perception %K weekly weight loss %K overweight or obesity %K elderly women. %U http://www.scielo.org.ar/scielo.php?script=sci_abstract&pid=S1852-73372011000400004&lng=en&nrm=iso&tlng=en