Objective The purpose of the study was to determine trends in the prevalence of individual health risk factors across time and to examine if their associations with mortality have changed over time. Methods Data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (NHANES III- 1988-1994 and NHANES 1999-2014; age ≥20 years) was used to examine differences in the odds ratio (OR) of 5-year mortality risk associated with various common health risk factors over the two survey periods using weighted logistic regression analysis adjusting for age, sex, obesity category and white ethnicity (n = 28,279). Results Over 97% of individuals had at least one of the 19 risk factors examined with no difference in the prevalence over time (P>0.34). The prevalence of lifestyle, social/mental and physical risk factors (2.2 to 19.1%) increased over time (P<0.0002), while the prevalence of having physiological risk factors decreased by ∼6.5% (P<0.0001). Having any lifestyle or social/ mental risk factor was significantly associated with a higher 5-year OR for mortality risk in 1999-2014, than 1988-94. In particular, having low education or use of mental health medication were not associated with mortality risk in 1988-94 (P>0.1), but were significantly associated with a higher 5-year OR for mortality in 1999-2014 (P<0.0001). Conversely, physiological risk factors were more weakly related with mortality risk in 1988-1994, than 1999-2014. Having any physical risk factor, and poor self-rated health were similarly related with 5-year mortality risk at both timepoints. Conclusion Health risk factors have both increased and decreased in prevalence over time, along with changes in the association between many of the risk factors and mortality risk. Takentogether, these changes complicate interpretation of temporal trends and warrant cautious interpretation of population health patterns based on surveillance data.
CITATION STYLE
Yu, W. W., Pooni, R., Ardern, C. I., & Kuk, J. L. (2023). Is anyone truly healthy? Trends in health risk factors prevalence and changes in their associations with all-cause mortality. PLoS ONE, 18(6 June). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0286691
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