Department of Communication, University of California, Davis, Davis, California, United States of America.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2019 Mar 13;14(3):e0213439. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0213439. eCollection 2019.
African American men are disproportionately affected by, not only HIV/AIDS, but also chronic non-communicable diseases. Despite the known benefits of physical activity for reducing chronic non-communicable diseases, scant research has identified factors that may influence physical activity in this population. A growing literature centers on the syndemic theory, the notion that multiple adverse conditions interact synergistically, contributing to excess morbidity. This secondary data analysis examined two primary questions: whether syndemic conditions prospectively predicted physical activity, and whether, consistent with the syndemic theory, syndemic conditions interacted to predict physical activity. Participants were 595 African American men who have sex with men (MSM), a population underrepresented in health research, enrolled in a health-promotion intervention trial from 2008-2011. We used generalized-estimating-equations models to test the associations of syndemic conditions and resilience factors measured pre-intervention to self-reported physical activity 6 and 12 months post-intervention. As hypothesized, reporting more syndemic conditions pre-intervention predicted reporting less physical activity 6 and 12 months post-intervention, adjusting for the intervention. However, contrary to the syndemic theory, we did not find evidence for the interaction effects of syndemic conditions in predicting physical activity. Receiving high school education and having greater social network diversity predicted more physical activity whereas older age predicted less physical activity. To our knowledge, this is the first study to examine the syndemic theory in relation to physical activity. Although reporting a greater number of syndemic conditions was related to reduced physical activity, there was no evidence for synergy among syndemic conditions.
非裔美国男性不仅受到艾滋病/艾滋病病毒的不成比例的影响,还受到慢性非传染性疾病的影响。尽管体育活动对减少慢性非传染性疾病有明显的好处,但很少有研究确定了可能影响这一人群体育活动的因素。越来越多的文献集中在综合征理论上,即多种不良状况协同作用,导致发病率过高。这项二次数据分析研究了两个主要问题:综合征状况是否前瞻性地预测体育活动,以及综合征状况是否符合综合征理论,相互作用来预测体育活动。参与者是非裔美国男性男男性行为者 595 人,这是健康研究中代表性不足的人群,他们于 2008 年至 2011 年参加了一项促进健康的干预试验。我们使用广义估计方程模型来检验综合征状况和弹性因素与干预前自我报告的体育活动的关联,这些因素在干预后 6 个月和 12 个月进行了测量。正如假设的那样,与干预前报告的更多综合征状况相比,报告的综合征状况预测了干预后 6 个月和 12 个月的体育活动减少,这是在干预的基础上进行的调整。然而,与综合征理论相反,我们没有发现综合征状况在预测体育活动方面存在相互作用的证据。接受高中教育和拥有更大的社交网络多样性预示着更多的体育活动,而年龄较大则预示着较少的体育活动。据我们所知,这是第一项检验综合征理论与体育活动之间关系的研究。虽然报告更多的综合征状况与减少体育活动有关,但在综合征状况之间没有协同作用的证据。