7 research outputs found
The importance of wellness among users of complementary and alternative medicine: findings from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey.
BackgroundThis study developed and tested a sociobehavioral wellness model of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) to differentiate predisposing factors, enabling resources, need, and personal health practices according to use for wellness, for combined wellness and treatment, or for treatment alone.MethodsData were from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), a cross-sectional, nationally representative sample of 23,393 adult Americans. This analysis included people who used at least one CAM modality in the past 12 months (n = 7003 adult users). Prevalence estimates and multinomial logistic regression results were weighted and adjusted for complex sample design.ResultsOverall, 86 % of CAM users reported reason for use as wellness (51 %) or wellness combined with treatment (35 %). White women had the lowest (48 %) and Asian men (66 %) had the highest wellness use. Compared to treatment only users, wellness users were significantly more likely to be older, more educated, in better health, and engaged in multiple healthy behaviors. There was support that those with health conditions were using methods for both treatment and to maintain health.ConclusionsThe findings underscore the central role of CAM in health self-management and wellness lifestyle. At a time of national health care reform highlighting the importance of health and wellness and employers turning to wellness programs to improve worker performance and well-being, these findings suggest a central role of CAM in those public health endeavors
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Sociodemographic Correlates of Allostatic Load and Longitudinal Patterns of Obesity among Adolescents in the United States: A Mediating Model of Stressful Life Events
The period of adolescence is a transitional developmental stage, critical in shaping health trajectories across the life course. While many individuals traverse the adolescent transition relatively unscathed, a number suffer from significant health problems from adolescence to adulthood. Recent studies have begun to investigate the biological mechanism through which social conditions early in the life course influence health trajectories. Previous research on allostatic load, an indicator of physiological dysregulation resulting from the wear and tear of stress, has focused on adults and the aging, but few have explored allostatic load among adolescents. Additionally, recent literature has begun to explore the mechanisms through which social conditions during adolescence lead to changing obesity patterns during the transition to adulthood, though none have considered the mediating mechanism of stressful life events.Using data from two nationally representative samples of adolescents age 12 to 19 years, the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) (N = 8,431) and the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health) (N = 9,311), the overarching goals of this study were (1) to investigate sociodemographic correlates of AL across adolescence from age 12 to 19 years, and (2) to determine whether stressful life events (SLE) in adolescence explain the relationship between adolescent sociodemographic factors and longitudinal patterns of obesity from adolescence to young adulthood. The research for this dissertation drew upon life course, social stratification, and stress process theories. Specific significant differences in AL among adolescents by age and race/ethnicity were found. In particular, higher AL scores, suggestive of greater cumulative physiological dysregulation, were significantly associated with older age and Black race/ethnicity. Select significant mediating pathways of adolescent SLE on becoming obese among males were also found. Mediation analysis revealed that SLE done to adolescent males partially explained the relationship between age and low family income on becoming obese over time. Surprisingly, no significant mediating effects of adolescent SLE on longitudinal obesity patterns were found among females. This study provided the first examination of associations between major sociodemographic factors and AL among a nationally representative sample of adolescents. The concept of AL offers great promise toward expanding our understanding of how social and environmental factors are embodied within our biological regulatory systems, and translated into disease outcomes and health disparities. The present research has significant implications for informing health prevention interventions among younger populations. Additionally, by focusing on the intervening mechanism through which adolescent social conditions may affect obesity, this research contributes to an understanding of the processes of obesity development during childhood and adolescence. These findings point to possible interventions that can prevent obesity among young males who are from low SES households. Recommendations regarding stress management and coping mechanisms could aid in the fight against the increasing obesity epidemic among the younger population
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The importance of wellness among users of complementary and alternative medicine: findings from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey.
BackgroundThis study developed and tested a sociobehavioral wellness model of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) to differentiate predisposing factors, enabling resources, need, and personal health practices according to use for wellness, for combined wellness and treatment, or for treatment alone.MethodsData were from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), a cross-sectional, nationally representative sample of 23,393 adult Americans. This analysis included people who used at least one CAM modality in the past 12 months (n = 7003 adult users). Prevalence estimates and multinomial logistic regression results were weighted and adjusted for complex sample design.ResultsOverall, 86 % of CAM users reported reason for use as wellness (51 %) or wellness combined with treatment (35 %). White women had the lowest (48 %) and Asian men (66 %) had the highest wellness use. Compared to treatment only users, wellness users were significantly more likely to be older, more educated, in better health, and engaged in multiple healthy behaviors. There was support that those with health conditions were using methods for both treatment and to maintain health.ConclusionsThe findings underscore the central role of CAM in health self-management and wellness lifestyle. At a time of national health care reform highlighting the importance of health and wellness and employers turning to wellness programs to improve worker performance and well-being, these findings suggest a central role of CAM in those public health endeavors
Greater Leisure Time Physical Activity Is Associated with Lower Allostatic Load in White, Black, and Mexican American Midlife Women: Findings from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 1999 through 2004
The importance of wellness among users of complementary and alternative medicine: findings from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey
BACKGROUND: This study developed and tested a sociobehavioral wellness model of complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) to differentiate predisposing factors, enabling resources, need, and personal health practices according to use for wellness, for combined wellness and treatment, or for treatment alone. METHODS: Data were from the 2007 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), a cross-sectional, nationally representative sample of 23,393 adult Americans. This analysis included people who used at least one CAM modality in the past 12 months (n = 7003 adult users). Prevalence estimates and multinomial logistic regression results were weighted and adjusted for complex sample design. RESULTS: Overall, 86 % of CAM users reported reason for use as wellness (51 %) or wellness combined with treatment (35 %). White women had the lowest (48 %) and Asian men (66 %) had the highest wellness use. Compared to treatment only users, wellness users were significantly more likely to be older, more educated, in better health, and engaged in multiple healthy behaviors. There was support that those with health conditions were using methods for both treatment and to maintain health. CONCLUSIONS: The findings underscore the central role of CAM in health self-management and wellness lifestyle. At a time of national health care reform highlighting the importance of health and wellness and employers turning to wellness programs to improve worker performance and well-being, these findings suggest a central role of CAM in those public health endeavors