| Literature DB >> 21651762 |
Ingibjörg H Jonsdottir1, Mats Börjesson, Gunnar Ahlborg.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Healthcare professionals play a central role in health promotion and lifestyle information towards patients as well as towards the general population, and it has been shown that own lifestyle habits can influence attitudes and counselling practice towards patients. The purpose of this study was to explore the participation of healthcare workers (HCWs) in a worksite health promotion (WHP) programme. We also aimed to find out whether HCWs with poorer lifestyle-related health engage in health-promotion activities to a larger extent than employees reporting healthier lifestyles.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21651762 PMCID: PMC3118251 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-11-448
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Characteristics of all the healthcare workers responding at baseline (n = 3207).
| Variable (n) | Classification | Characteristics n (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Sex (3207) | Women | 2772 (86) |
| Men | 435 (14) | |
| Age (3207) | Years | |
| 18-34 | 461 (14) | |
| 35-44 | 801 (25) | |
| 45-54 | 1104 (34) | |
| 55+ | 841 (26) | |
| Educational level1 (2900) | Lower | 1160 (40) |
| Higher | 1740 (60) | |
| BMI (3166) | Mean (SD) | 24.5 (SD 3.6) |
| - Underweight | BMI< 18.5 | 31 (1) |
| - Normal weight | BMI 18.5-24.9 | 1901 (59) |
| - Overweight | BMI 25-29.9 | 1011 (32) |
| - Obese | BMI > 30 | 223 (7) |
| Physical activity (3185) | Sedentary | 470 (15) |
| Light activity | 1697 (53) | |
| Moderate to vigorous | 1018 (32) | |
| Sleep disturbances (3188) | No | 2346 (73) |
| Yes | 842 (26) | |
| HAD-D score (3143) | < 7 | 2584 (82) |
| ≥ 7 | 559 (18) | |
| Expectation/feelings about going to work (3164) | Happy or fairly happy and satisfied at the thought of an interesting workday ahead | 2447 (77) |
| Neither positive nor negative feelings about going to work | 431 (14) | |
| Rather or strong uneasy feeling about going to work | 286 (9) | |
| Self-reported health (n = 3,195) | Very good/good | 2620 (82) |
| Neither good or bad | 388 (12) | |
| Not good | 187 (6) |
1 Lower = high school/vocational; Higher = college/university. Missing are those responding to 'other professions' that could not be categorized into lower or higher education.
BMI = Body mass index.
HAD-D = Subscale depression of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. A score of ≥ 7 is used to indicate a relative lack of joy/happiness.
Comparison of health-related characteristics between participants and non-participants measured before the onset of the lifestyle project
| Participants (n = 400) | Non-participants (n = 1459) | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| BMI | |||
| - < 18.5 | 1 (3) | 1 (16) | .168 |
| - 18.5-24.9 | 64 (254) | 61 (874) | |
| - 25-29.9 | 30 (118) | 31 (441) | |
| - > 30 | 5 (20) | 8 (113) | |
| Physical activity | |||
| - Sedentary | 8 (30) | 16 (227) | .0005 |
| - Physically active | 93 (370) | 84 (1226) | |
| Sleep disturbances | |||
| - Yes | 21 (82) | 26 (381) | .025 |
| - No | 79 (314) | 74 (1073) | |
| HAD-D score | |||
| - < 7 | 86 (335) | 83 (1189) | .159 |
| - ≥ 7 | 14 (55) | 17 (245) | |
| Feeling about going to work | 84 (335) | 79 (1133) | .008 |
| - Positive | 12 (48) | 13 (185) | |
| - Neutral | 4 (16) | 8.5 (122) | |
| - Uneasy | |||
| Self-reported health | |||
| - Very good/good | 87 (346) | 83 (1208) | .064 |
| - Neither good nor bad | 11 (43) | 12 (174) | |
| - Not good | 3 (10) | 5 (74) | |
| Educational level1 | .435 | ||
| - Lower | 39 (140) | 37 (496) | |
| - Higher | 61 (216) | 63 (842) |
Only persons replying to the question at the four year follow-up whether they had participated in the Lifestyle in the West project are included in the analysis (n = 1859)
BMI = Body mass index.
HAD-D = Subscale depression of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. A score of ≥ 7 is used to indicate a relative lack of joy/happiness.
1 Lower = high school/vocational; Higher = college/university. Missing are those responding to 'other professions' that could not be categorized into lower or higher education.
Unadjusted and adjusted participation ratios (PR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) for sex and the respective baseline indicator relevant for each of the different themes, as analysed by Cox regression
| Theme (number who participated) | Category | Unadjusted PR | Adjusted PR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | Men | 1 | 1 |
| Women | 2.02 (0.99-4.13) | 1.90 (0.82-4.37)1 | |
| BMI | Normal weight | 1 | 1 |
| Overweight/obese | 1.13 (0.79-1.62) | 1.07 (0.71-1.59)2 | |
| Sex | Men | 1 | 1 |
| Women | 2.62 (1.06-6.43) | 3.24 (1.01-10.33)1 | |
| Sleep disturbances | No | 1 | 1 |
| Yes | 1.08 (0.69-1.70) | 0.97 (0.62-1.52)3 | |
| Sex | Men | 1 | 1 |
| Women | 2.08 (1.32-3.27) | 2.09 (1.25-3.48)1 | |
| Physical activity level | Physically active | 1 | 1 |
| Sedentary | 0.51 (0.33-0.77) | 0.51 (0.34-0.77)4 | |
| Sex | Men | NA | |
| Women | |||
| Depressive mood (HAD-D) | Low (< 7) | 1 | |
| High (≥ 7) | 0.66 (0.36-1.21) |
Only persons replying at the four year follow-up to the question whether they participated in the Lifestyle in the West project are included in the analyses (n = 1859)
1 Adjusted for educational level and age.
2 Adjusted for educational level, age, and sex.
3 Adjusted for age and sex.
4 Adjusted for age.
NA = Not statistically analysed as only one man out of 107 participated.
BMI = Body mass index.
HAD-D = Subscale depression of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.