Livaudais Jennifer C, Kaplan Celia Patricia, Haas Jennifer S, Pérez-Stable Eliseo J, Stewart Susan, Jarlais Genevieve Des
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Medical Effectiveness Research Center for Diverse Populations, University of California, San Francisco, California 94143-0856, USA.
J Womens Health (Larchmt). 2005 Jul-Aug;14(6):485-95. doi: 10.1089/jwh.2005.14.485.
Physical inactivity, poor diet, excessive alcohol consumption, and smoking are modifiable risk factors associated with development of chronic diseases. Although the prevalence of diseases associated with these detrimental lifestyle behaviors is high among women in the United States, they may not receive adequate counseling from physicians.
To predict physicians' lifestyle counseling practices, we assessed personal, professional, and health behavior characteristics from responses to a self-administered survey of breast cancer risk reduction practices. Subjects were California physicians identified through AMA Masterfile, in family practice, internal medicine, or obstetrics/gynecology, who were asked to report the percentages of women patients they counseled on physical activity, diet, alcohol, and smoking.
Of 1647 eligible physicians, 822 (50.0%) responded. Fifty-six percent reported counseling at least 75% of patients about physical activity, 54.6% about diet, and 44.8% about alcohol. More than three quarters (78.7%) counseled at least 75% of patients about smoking. In logistic regression analyses, woman gender, family practice, and internal medicine specialties emerged as significant predictors of counseling for all lifestyle behaviors. Older age was associated with dietary and alcohol counseling. Race/ethnicity was associated only with smoking counseling, and country of medical school was associated with counseling for physical activity and smoking. Sources of new medical knowledge emerged as predictors for all types of counseling, whereas physicians' own level of physical activity only predicted counseling about physical activity.
Physicians' personal, professional, practice, and health behavior characteristics were associated with reported lifestyle counseling of women patients. Results reveal important directions for future physician-based interventions to improve counseling.
缺乏体育锻炼、不良饮食、过度饮酒和吸烟是与慢性病发展相关的可改变风险因素。尽管在美国女性中,与这些有害生活方式行为相关的疾病患病率很高,但她们可能未从医生那里获得足够的咨询。
为了预测医生的生活方式咨询行为,我们通过对一项关于降低乳腺癌风险行为的自填式调查的回复,评估了个人、专业和健康行为特征。研究对象是通过美国医学协会主文件识别出的加利福尼亚州从事家庭医学、内科或妇产科的医生,他们被要求报告就体育活动、饮食、饮酒和吸烟向女性患者提供咨询的比例。
在1647名符合条件的医生中,822名(50.0%)做出了回复。56%的医生报告称,至少为75%的患者提供了体育活动方面的咨询,54.6%提供了饮食方面的咨询,44.8%提供了饮酒方面的咨询。超过四分之三(78.7%)的医生为至少75%的患者提供了吸烟方面的咨询。在逻辑回归分析中,女性性别、家庭医学和内科专业成为所有生活方式行为咨询的显著预测因素。年龄较大与饮食和饮酒咨询相关。种族/族裔仅与吸烟咨询相关,医学院校所在国家与体育活动和吸烟咨询相关。新医学知识来源成为所有类型咨询的预测因素,而医生自身的体育活动水平仅预测体育活动方面的咨询。
医生的个人、专业、执业和健康行为特征与报告的对女性患者的生活方式咨询相关。结果揭示了未来基于医生的干预措施以改善咨询的重要方向。