James H. Swan, Ph.D. Professor of Applied Gerontology, Department of Rehabilitation and Health Services, University of North Texas,, Denton, TX, USA,
J Nutr Health Aging. 2018;22(4):476-482. doi: 10.1007/s12603-017-0967-3.
Tobacco smoking and physical inactivity are among leading behavioral risk factors for ill health in older adults. This study considers how smoking is associated with physical activity.
Using a Life-Course model, data are analyzed regarding this relationship, controlling for, and interacted with, life-course and other factors. Daily smokers and sometimes smokers were hypothesized to engage in less leisure-time physical activity than those who never smoked, while those who stopped smoking were expected to do more than never smokers. Analyses were performed using SAS-Callable SUDAAN.
Secondary data from ten years of a national sample of adults aged 18 and over of the National Health Interview Survey, 2001-2010, are used (N = 264,945, missing data excluded, of 282,313 total cases).
Daily smokers, occasional smokers, and smoking quitters are compared to never smokers with regard to requisite physical activity (150 minutes per week of moderate, 100 of vigorous, and/or 50 of strengthening activity). Life-course measures include birth cohorts, age, and year of survey, as well as gender, race/ethnicity, and education.
Overall, hypotheses are supported regarding daily smokers and quitters; but the hypothesis is strongly rejected among sometimes smokers, who are much more likely to do requisite physical activity. Findings differ by age, sometimes smokers age 65 and over being less likely to do physical activity. Findings among all men are similar to the overall findings, while those among all women are similar to those for older respondents. Associations of smoking status with physical activity vary greatly by race/ethnicity.
Daily smokers may be most in need of both smoking cessation and leisure-time physical activity interventions. Smoking-cessation efforts may pay greater physical activity benefits among women and the aged, while smoking-reduction efforts may provide better outcomes among men. Smoking reduction efforts may pay more exercise benefits among African-Americans and Hispanics.
吸烟和缺乏身体活动是导致老年人健康不良的主要行为风险因素之一。本研究考虑了吸烟与身体活动之间的关系。
使用生命历程模型,分析了这种关系,控制并相互作用了生命历程和其他因素。假设每天吸烟和偶尔吸烟的人比从不吸烟的人从事更少的休闲时间身体活动,而戒烟的人比从不吸烟的人从事更多的身体活动。使用 SAS-Callable SUDAAN 进行分析。
使用全国性样本成年人的十年国家健康访谈调查(2001-2010 年)的二级数据,排除缺失数据(总病例数为 282313 人,排除缺失数据后为 264945 人)。
将每日吸烟者、偶尔吸烟者和戒烟者与从不吸烟者进行比较,比较的方面是必要的身体活动(每周 150 分钟的中等强度、100 分钟的剧烈强度和/或 50 分钟的强化活动)。生命历程测量包括出生队列、年龄和调查年份,以及性别、种族/民族和教育。
总体而言,关于每日吸烟者和戒烟者的假设得到了支持;但对于偶尔吸烟者的假设则被强烈否定,因为他们更有可能进行必要的身体活动。这些发现因年龄而异,65 岁及以上的偶尔吸烟者不太可能进行身体活动。所有男性的发现与总体发现相似,而所有女性的发现与老年受访者的发现相似。吸烟状况与身体活动的关联因种族/民族而异。
每日吸烟者可能最需要戒烟和休闲时间身体活动干预。戒烟努力可能会在女性和老年人中带来更多的身体活动益处,而减少吸烟的努力可能会在男性中带来更好的结果。减少吸烟的努力可能会使非裔美国人和西班牙裔人获得更多的锻炼益处。