Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity

Health plan-based resources are promising avenues for decreasing cardiovascular disease risk. This study examined associations of lifestyle-related resource utilization within a healthcare delivery system and cardiovascular biomarkers among midlife women with low physical activity. Midlife women (45...

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Main Authors: Sylvia E. Badon, Nerissa Nance, Renee Fogelberg, Charles Quesenberry, Monique M. Hedderson, Lyndsay A. Avalos
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521000917
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spelling doaj-e16f2c9f5fc54cf2a051c70e049911192021-08-14T04:29:54ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552021-09-0123101401Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activitySylvia E. Badon0Nerissa Nance1Renee Fogelberg2Charles Quesenberry3Monique M. Hedderson4Lyndsay A. Avalos5Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Oakland CA, United States; Corresponding author.Kaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Oakland CA, United StatesThe Permanente Medical Group, Oakland CA, United StatesKaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Oakland CA, United StatesKaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Oakland CA, United StatesKaiser Permanente Northern California Division of Research, Oakland CA, United StatesHealth plan-based resources are promising avenues for decreasing cardiovascular disease risk. This study examined associations of lifestyle-related resource utilization within a healthcare delivery system and cardiovascular biomarkers among midlife women with low physical activity. Midlife women (45-55 years old) with <10 min/week of reported physical activity at a primary care visit within a large integrated healthcare delivery system in Northern California in 2015 (n = 55,393) were identified. Within this cohort, subsequent lifestyle-related health education and individual coaching resource utilization, and the next recorded physical activity, weight, systolic blood pressure, plasma glucose, HDL and LDL cholesterol measures up to 2 years after the index primary care visit were identified from electronic health records. We used a multilevel linear model to estimate associations. About 3% (n = 1587) of our cohort had ≥1 lifestyle-related resource encounter; 0.3% (n = 178) had ≥ 4 encounters. Participation in ≥4 lifestyle-related resource encounters (compared to none) was associated with 51 more minutes/week of physical activity (95% CI: 33,69) at the next clinical measurement in all women, 6.2 kg lower weight (95% CI: −7.0,-5.5) at the next measurement in women with obesity, and 8–10 mg/dL lower plasma glucose (95% CI: −30,14 and −23,2, respectively) at the next measurement in women with diabetes or prediabetes. Our results support the sustained utilization of health plan-based lifestyle-related resources for improving physical activity, weight, and plasma glucose in high-risk midlife women. Given the observed low utilization, health system-wide efforts may be warranted to increase utilization of lifestyle-related resources in this population.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521000917LifestyleCounselingHealth educationMidlifeWomen
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sylvia E. Badon
Nerissa Nance
Renee Fogelberg
Charles Quesenberry
Monique M. Hedderson
Lyndsay A. Avalos
spellingShingle Sylvia E. Badon
Nerissa Nance
Renee Fogelberg
Charles Quesenberry
Monique M. Hedderson
Lyndsay A. Avalos
Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
Preventive Medicine Reports
Lifestyle
Counseling
Health education
Midlife
Women
author_facet Sylvia E. Badon
Nerissa Nance
Renee Fogelberg
Charles Quesenberry
Monique M. Hedderson
Lyndsay A. Avalos
author_sort Sylvia E. Badon
title Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
title_short Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
title_full Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
title_fullStr Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
title_full_unstemmed Lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
title_sort lifestyle-related education and counseling resource utilization and cardiovascular biomarkers in midlife women with low physical activity
publisher Elsevier
series Preventive Medicine Reports
issn 2211-3355
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Health plan-based resources are promising avenues for decreasing cardiovascular disease risk. This study examined associations of lifestyle-related resource utilization within a healthcare delivery system and cardiovascular biomarkers among midlife women with low physical activity. Midlife women (45-55 years old) with <10 min/week of reported physical activity at a primary care visit within a large integrated healthcare delivery system in Northern California in 2015 (n = 55,393) were identified. Within this cohort, subsequent lifestyle-related health education and individual coaching resource utilization, and the next recorded physical activity, weight, systolic blood pressure, plasma glucose, HDL and LDL cholesterol measures up to 2 years after the index primary care visit were identified from electronic health records. We used a multilevel linear model to estimate associations. About 3% (n = 1587) of our cohort had ≥1 lifestyle-related resource encounter; 0.3% (n = 178) had ≥ 4 encounters. Participation in ≥4 lifestyle-related resource encounters (compared to none) was associated with 51 more minutes/week of physical activity (95% CI: 33,69) at the next clinical measurement in all women, 6.2 kg lower weight (95% CI: −7.0,-5.5) at the next measurement in women with obesity, and 8–10 mg/dL lower plasma glucose (95% CI: −30,14 and −23,2, respectively) at the next measurement in women with diabetes or prediabetes. Our results support the sustained utilization of health plan-based lifestyle-related resources for improving physical activity, weight, and plasma glucose in high-risk midlife women. Given the observed low utilization, health system-wide efforts may be warranted to increase utilization of lifestyle-related resources in this population.
topic Lifestyle
Counseling
Health education
Midlife
Women
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2211335521000917
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