Healthcare employees moderately follow health-promoting lifestyle behaviours: study

A study by a group of researchers from Hamad Medical Corporation ( HMC) has revealed that healthcare employees in the country moderately follow health-promoting lifestyle behaviours.

The study published on Qatar Medical Journal and featured on Qscience, part of Hamad Bin Khalifa University Press was conducted by Shamja Sofia Razzakh, Rajvir Singh, Bilal Uddin Khan and Nesiya Hassan, who work with various departments of HMC .

The aim of the study, titled, ‘The health-promoting lifestyle behaviours of healthcare employees in Qatar – A cross-sectional comparative study’ was to compare the health-promoting lifestyle of at-risk and non-risk groups of employees working in HMC, the largest secondary and tertiary healthcare provider in Qatar.

This was a cross-sectional comparative research study of all categories of healthcare employees working in HMC facilities. Participants with a body mass index (BMI) >30, smokers, or those with pre-existing non-communicable diseases were classified as the at-risk group, and individuals without any of these factors were classified as the non-risk group. Data were collected through an online survey using an adopted scale, Adolescent Health Promotion Short Form (AHP-SF), after approval by the Institutional Review Board of HMC.

The age of the participants ranged from 22 to 69 years and the majority of them were female (64.07%). Most of the respondents were overweight or obese, accounting for 42.99% and 26.68% of the sample, respectively. Interestingly, 87.64% of the participants were non-smokers and approximately 70% had no chronic diseases.

Five subdomains – nutrition, social support, health responsibility, exercise, and stress management – of the AHP-SF scale showed no significant statistical differences between at-risk and non-risk groups. However, the “life appreciation” scale showed significant statistical differences between the at-risk and non-risk groups. The AHP-SF scores varied significantly across the participants’ regions of origin, with Americans having the highest score compared to other regions.

The study has revealed that the healthcare employees moderately practise health-promoting lifestyle behaviours. The lowest scores were in the exercise subdomain, suggesting that more interventions are required to improve these behaviours. Healthcare organisations are ideal settings to implement comprehensive workplace wellness programmes and awareness campaigns that can motivate employees to take greater responsibility for their own health and influence the wider community to adopt health-promoting lifestyle behaviours.

Related Story

Source link

Visited 1 times, 1 visit(s) today

Related Article

No One Size Fits All Approach to Sustainable Health Resolutions

Gym memberships will be selling like hotcakes for the next few weeks as people try to get on track or back on track following the holidays. The host of the VOCM Wellness and Healthy Lifestyle Show, Dr. Mike Wahl, says the first thing he tells people is never worry about what you eat or

Diet, lifestyle influences chances of age-related brain disorders: Study | Health

The scientists at the Allen Institute for Brain Science have identified the molecular changes that occur in the brains of ageing mice and located a hot spot where most damage is centralized. The cells in the area are also connected with metabolism, thus suggesting a connection between diet and brain health. Also read | Poor

Eating Healthy – The New York Times

By Jancee Dunn I write the Well newsletter, about personal health and fitness. I love those sprinkle-covered sheet cakes you can buy at the supermarket — so much so that when my daughter was small, I trained her to grab the corner piece for me at birthday parties. When you hear the phrase “ultraprocessed foods,”

Link Between Inactivity and Chronic Conditions

(Credit: © Tracy King | Dreamstime.com) In a nutshell Physical inactivity is linked to increased risk of 19 different chronic conditions, according to a University of Iowa study analyzing over 40,000 patient records. The research provides the most comprehensive evidence yet of how sedentary lifestyles impact health. A simple two-question survey about exercise habits, taking

0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x