Abstract
BackgroundHealthy lifestyle behaviors have been demonstrated to be beneficial for positive health outcomes and the quality of life in cancer survivors. However, adherence to recommendations is low. More insight is needed in factors that may explain engagement in lifestyle behaviors to develop effective cancer aftercare interventions. This study assessed different factors, namely socio-demographic, cancer-related, psychological, social cognitive factors (attitude, social support, self-efficacy) and intention, in relationship to five lifestyle behaviors (smoking, physical activity, alcohol, and fruit and vegetable consumption).MethodsEarly survivors of various types of cancer were recruited from eighteen Dutch Hospitals (n = 255). Distal factors (socio-demographic, cancer related, psychological), proximal factors (social cognitive), intention and five lifestyle behaviors (smoking, physical activity, alcohol, fruit and vegetable consumption) were assessed through a self-reported questionnaire. Cross-sectional analyses (correlations and regression analyses) were conducted.ResultsThe lifestyle of a small group (11 %) of the cancer survivors was coherent with all five health recommendations, the majority (>80 %) adhered to two, three of four recommendations, and only few (<7 %) adhered to one or none recommendation. The highest prevalence in followed recommendations have been detected in physical activity (87.4 %), refrain from smoking (82 %), and alcohol consumption (75.4 %). There was low adherence to the fruit recommendation (54.8 %) and to the vegetable recommendation (27.4 %). Only weak associations were found between the different behaviors. Each separate lifestyle behavior was influenced by different patterns of correlates. Self-efficacy, attitude, and intention were the strongest correlates in all examined behaviors, although with various contributions, while socio-demographic, cancer-related and psychological factors provided a much smaller contribution.ConclusionsOutcomes of engagement in healthy lifestyle behaviors were more positive in this study compared to other research in cancer survivors; however, there is room for improvements in adherence to all five lifestyle behaviors. Especially fruit consumption was poor and vegetable consumption even worse. Our findings emphasized that all examined lifestyle behaviors need to be encouraged, with taken into account that each lifestyle behavior may be influenced by a specific set of mainly social cognitive factors or intention.
Highlights
Healthy lifestyle behaviors have been demonstrated to be beneficial for positive health outcomes and the quality of life in cancer survivors
A healthy lifestyle is of major importance for cancer survivors, since it has been shown that adherence to an increasing number of health recommendations may lower the risk of lifestyle related chronic diseases and may lead to a higher health related quality of life [1,2,3,4,5]
Correlations between the different lifestyle behaviors We explored mutual correlations between the continuously measured lifestyle behaviors
Summary
Healthy lifestyle behaviors have been demonstrated to be beneficial for positive health outcomes and the quality of life in cancer survivors. Previous research suggested that adherence to physical activity recommendations might be the most important lifestyle behavior associated with lower mortality and higher quality of life in cancer survivors [10, 11, 15]. Considering that cancer survivors are at increased risk of cancer recurrence and lifestylerelated chronic diseases, adhering to multiple lifestyle recommendations is very important for the health related quality of life of this specific group. This underlines the need to understand which factors explain the different health behaviors and the adherence to an increasing number of lifestyle recommendations. Possible correlations among lifestyle behaviors need to be identified to understand possible mutual influences
Published Version (Free)
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have