Constellation, le dépôt institutionnel de l'Université du Québec à Chicoutimi

Relationship between multimorbidity and physical activity : Secondary analysis from the Quebec health survey

Hudon Catherine, Soubhi Hassan et Fortin Martin. (2008). Relationship between multimorbidity and physical activity : Secondary analysis from the Quebec health survey. BMC Public Health, 8, (304),

[thumbnail of Relationship between multimorbidity and physical activity Secondary analysis from the Quebec health surve.pdf]
Prévisualisation
PDF - Version publiée
Disponible sous licence Creative Commons : Attribution - Pas d’utilisation commerciale (CC-BY-NC 2.5).

311kB

URL officielle: http://dx.doi.org/doi:10.1186/1471-2458-8-304

Résumé

Background

Abundant literature supports the beneficial effects of physical activity for improving health of people with chronic diseases. The relationship between multimorbidity and physical activity levels, however, has been little evaluated. The purpose of the current exploratory study was to examine the relationship between a) multimorbidity and physical activity levels, and b) long-term limitations on activity, self-rated general health, psychological distress, and physical activity levels for each sex in adults, after age, education, income, and employment factors were controlled for.

Methods

Data from the Quebec Health Survey 1998 were used. The sample included 16,782 adults 18–69 yr of age. Independent variables were multimorbidity, long-term limitations on activity, self-rated general health, and psychological distress. The dependent variable was physical activity levels. Links between the independent and dependent variables were assessed separately for men and women with multinomial regressions while accounting for the survey sampling design and household clustering.

Results

About 46% of the participants were men. Multimorbidity was not associated with physical activity levels for either men or women. Men and women with long-term limitations on activity and with poor-to-average self-rated general health were less likely to be physically active. No relationship between psychological distress and physical activity was found for men. Women with high levels of psychological distress were less likely to be physically active.

Conclusion

Multimorbidity was not associated with physical activity levels in either sex, when age, education, income, and employment factors were controlled for. Long-term limitations on activity and poor-to-average self-rated general health seem related to a reduction in physical activity levels for both sexes, whereas psychological distress was associated with a reduction in physical activity levels only among women. Longitudinal studies using a comorbidity or multimorbidity index to account for severity of the chronic diseases are needed to replicate the results of this exploratory study.

Type de document:Article publié dans une revue avec comité d'évaluation
Volume:8
Numéro:304
Version évaluée par les pairs:Oui
Date:5 Septembre 2008
Sujets:Sciences de la santé
Sciences de la santé > Sciences de l'activité physique et réadaptation > Physiothérapie
Sciences de la santé > Sciences médicales
Département, module, service et unité de recherche:Départements et modules > Département des sciences de la santé > Unité d'enseignement en physiothérapie
Mots-clés:chronic disease, comorbidity, multimorbidity, exercise, physical activity, health status, health surveys, quality of life, socioeconomic factors
Déposé le:24 oct. 2016 21:01
Dernière modification:17 oct. 2017 18:30
Afficher les statistiques de telechargements

Éditer le document (administrateurs uniquement)

Creative Commons LicenseSauf indication contraire, les documents archivés dans Constellation sont rendus disponibles selon les termes de la licence Creative Commons "Paternité, pas d'utilisation commerciale, pas de modification" 2.5 Canada.

Bibliothèque Paul-Émile-Boulet, UQAC
555, boulevard de l'Université
Chicoutimi (Québec)  CANADA G7H 2B1
418 545-5011, poste 5630