Preventive medicine
-
Preventive medicine · Dec 2020
The medical costs of low leisure-time physical activity among working-age adults: Gender and minority status matter.
This study analyzes the direct medical costs of low physical activity by race/ethnicity and gender. Average health expenditures based on physical activity status for Black non-Hispanics (NH), Asian NHs, and Hispanics were compared to White NHs. Data from the National Health Interview Survey were merged with the Medical Expenditure Panel Survey for years 2000-2010 and 2001-2011, respectively, and weights were applied to ensure generalizability to the larger US population. ⋯ Among women, medical expenditures were $956 per year less among active White non-Hispanics relative to their inactive counterparts, and $815 per year among Hispanics. Essentially, the average reduction in health care expenditures is relatively consistent for five out of the eight groups. The absence of any reduction in average health care expenditures for three of the groups, however, suggests that there may be environmental factors at play for certain groups that mitigate the impact of physical activity on health expenditures.
-
Preventive medicine · Dec 2020
A model exploring the relationship between nutrition knowledge, behavior, diabetes self-management and outcomes from the dining with diabetes program.
To examine the relationship between changes in participant's knowledge, beliefs, dietary behavior, diabetes self-management and program outcomes in West Virginia Dinning with Diabetes (DWD) program. We used a longitudinal pre-test and post-test study design and data from 2745 individuals with diabetes who participated from 2007 to 2012. The DWD was offered in community-based settings across the state as an educational program (five classes over a 3-month period). ⋯ Diabetes self-management mediated the relationship between knowledge, dietary behavior and program outcomes. The indexes of fit for the tested model indicated a good fit [TLI =0.99, CFI = 0.95, and Root Mean Square Error of Approximation (RMSEA) =0.05]. Results indicate DWD group sessions can be effective in supporting individuals with diabetes to change knowledge, dietary behaviors, adherence to self-management and follow-up provider visits for diabetes care.
-
Preventive medicine · Nov 2020
Shared and unique risk factors for tobacco use among rural versus urban adolescents.
Researchers have proposed numerous factors that may contribute to rural adolescents' heightened risk for tobacco use. Some of these include well-known risk factors for tobacco use, whereas others concern factors unique to rural populations, reflecting norms and values ("rural culture") that accept and encourage tobacco use. This study aimed to test a broad range of tobacco-use risk factors to determine which were a) universal risk factors for both urban and rural adolescents vs. b) unique risk factors for rural adolescents. ⋯ Having an adult tobacco user in the home (for prevalent use) and susceptibility to a male family member offer of tobacco products (for both prevalent and incident use) were associated with tobacco use only for rural adolescents. These findings align with qualitative work demonstrating that masculinity and an intergenerational tobacco culture are important to male adolescents. This unique rural profile should be considered when developing prevention efforts.
-
Preventive medicine · Nov 2020
E-cigarettes: How can they help smokers quit without addicting a new generation?
The dramatic increase in youth use of electronic nicotine delivery systems (ENDS; e.g., e-cigarettes) in the United States has focused regulatory efforts to address this concern while still encouraging smokers to switch completely to lower risk products or quit all tobacco product use. Increases in the minimum age for purchase of all tobacco products and changes in enforcement policy for ENDS have been recently enacted in an effort to address the youth vaping epidemic. ⋯ Some, such as disallowing flavors other than tobacco or menthol or limiting nicotine delivery, may help reduce youth use but could also inhibit smokers from quitting smoking. Other approaches, including reducing the high-tech appearance and discreteness of ENDS, discontinuing use of coupons and two-for-one type price incentives for ENDS, limiting retail sales of these products to adult-only facilities, and incorporating technological innovations such as biometrics or geofencing into ENDS, may help manufacturers demonstrate that marketing of their products would help reduce youth use of ENDS and lessen the epidemic, while still assuring adult smokers have access to products that encourage discontinuing combusted product use.