Interactions of comorbidity and five simple environmental unhealthy habits concerning physical and mental quality of life in the clinical setting

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Abstract

The objective of this study was to examine the interactions between comorbidity and five lifestyle single habits concerning different subscales of quality of life (QoL). For the study, 302 patients were consecutively recruited at the internal medicine department of a tertiary teaching hospital. Lifestyle habits, comorbidities and QoL were recorded according to validated questionnaires. Five single unhealthy habits, such as tobacco consumption, dietary intake of ultra-processed pas-tries, raw nuts or carbonated drinks, sleep time and physical activity patterns were selected according to previously published data. The main outcomes of the study were the scores of the eight sub-scales of the SF-36 QoL survey. The aggregate of unhealthy habits showed statistically significant association to every category in the SF-36 questionnaire, both in the univariate and the multivariate analysis when adjusting by age, sex and comorbidity. An interaction was found between comorbidity and unhealthy habits in both physical and mental summaries of SF-36. In conclusion, the lifestyle assessment according to five unhealthy habits is associated with a worse QoL. The interaction between comorbidity and unhealthy habits is especially clear in diseased patients due to the interplay between illness and lifestyle in the prediction of QoL.

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Martínez-Urbistondo, D., Del Villar, R. S., Ramos-Lopez, O., Fernández, M. A., Segovia, R. C., Domínguez, A., … Martinez, J. A. (2021). Interactions of comorbidity and five simple environmental unhealthy habits concerning physical and mental quality of life in the clinical setting. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 18(18). https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18189590

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