Department of General Practice and Elderly Care, EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, VU Medical Centre Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, EMGO Institute for Health and Care Research, VU Medical Centre Amsterdam, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
PLoS One. 2016 Oct 31;11(10):e0165041. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0165041. eCollection 2016.
In this exploratory study we examined the associations between several social network characteristics and lifestyle behaviours in adults at increased risk of diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. In addition, we explored whether similarities in lifestyle between individuals and their network members, or the level of social support perceived by these individuals, could explain these associations.
From the control group of the Hoorn Prevention Study, participants with high and low educational attainment were approached for a structured interview between April and August 2010. Inclusion was stopped when fifty adults agreed to participate. Participants and a selection of their network members (e.g. spouses, best friends, neighbours, colleagues) completed a questionnaire on healthy lifestyle that included questions on fruit and vegetable intake, daily physical activity and leisure-time sedentary behaviour. We first examined associations between network characteristics and lifestyle using regression analyses. Second, we assessed associations between network characteristics and social support, social support and lifestyle, and compared the participants' lifestyles to those of their network members using concordance correlation coefficients.
Fifty adults (50/83 x 100 = 62% response) and 170 of their network members (170/192 x 100 = 89% response) participated in the study. Individuals with more close-knit relationships, more friends who live nearby, and a larger and denser network showed higher levels of vegetable consumption and physical activity, and lower levels of sedentary behaviour. Perceived social norms or perceived support for behavioural change were not related to healthy lifestyle. Except for spousal concordance for vegetable intake, the lifestyle of individuals and their network members were not alike.
Study results suggest that adults with a larger and denser social network have a healthier lifestyle. Underlying mechanisms for these associations should be further explored, as the current results suggest a minimal role for social support and modelling by network members.
在这项探索性研究中,我们研究了几种社交网络特征与处于糖尿病和心血管疾病高危人群的成年人生活方式行为之间的关联。此外,我们还探讨了个体与其网络成员之间的生活方式相似性,或这些个体感知到的社会支持水平,是否可以解释这些关联。
从霍恩预防研究的对照组中,邀请具有高、低教育程度的参与者在 2010 年 4 月至 8 月期间进行结构化访谈。当有 50 名成年人同意参与时,就停止了招募。参与者及其一些网络成员(例如配偶、最好的朋友、邻居、同事)完成了一份关于健康生活方式的问卷,其中包括关于水果和蔬菜摄入量、日常体力活动和休闲时间久坐行为的问题。我们首先使用回归分析来检查网络特征与生活方式之间的关联。其次,我们评估了网络特征与社会支持、社会支持与生活方式之间的关联,并使用一致性相关系数比较了参与者的生活方式与其网络成员的生活方式。
有 50 名成年人(50/83 x 100 = 62%的回应率)及其 170 名网络成员(170/192 x 100 = 89%的回应率)参与了研究。关系更紧密、有更多居住在附近的朋友、网络更大且更密集的个体,其蔬菜摄入量和体力活动水平更高,久坐行为水平更低。感知到的社会规范或感知到的行为改变支持与健康生活方式无关。除了配偶在蔬菜摄入量上的一致性外,个体及其网络成员的生活方式并不相似。
研究结果表明,社交网络更大且更密集的成年人生活方式更健康。应该进一步探讨这些关联的潜在机制,因为目前的结果表明,社会支持和网络成员的榜样作用的作用有限。