Life satisfaction, cardiovascular risk factors, unhealthy behaviours and socioeconomic inequality, 5 years after coronary angiography.

Michèle Baumann, Anastase Tchicaya, Kyle Vanderpool, Nathalie Lorentz, Etienne Le Bihan

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    Résumé

    Background Five years after coronary angiography, life satisfaction (LS) among patients may be related to incidents of cardiovascular diseases, risk factors and unhealthy behaviours and socioeconomic conditions, but their respective influence remains unclear. Our aim is to analyze LS and its relationships with those factors. Methods Among the 4,391 patients initially contacted, 547 deaths were reported and 209 had an invalid address. In 2013?2014, 3,635 patients who underwent coronary angiography in 2008?2009 at the National Institute of Cardiac Surgery and Cardiological Intervention (INCCI) in Luxembourg were asked to complete a self-administered questionnaire assessing LS [1?10] and other variables. Data were analysed via multiple regression models adjusted initially on age, sex and income, and for a second time with the addition of all CVRF. Results LS of 1,289 volunteers (69.2 years) was 7.3/10. Most were men, Luxembourgish, employees and manual workers, had secondary education and an income of 36,000 euros or more per year. LS was lowest in female patients, and those with a low to middle income. Patients who lived in a couple had the best LS. Patients with a history in the previous 5 years of physical inactivity (regression coefficient: ?0.903), angina pectoris (rc ?0.843), obesity (rc ?0.512), diabetes, or hypercholesterolemia, were more likely to have lower LS. The previous associations were mostly maintained on the second analysis, with the exceptions of diabetes and obesity. In addition, patients who stopped smoking because of peer pressure (rc ?0.011) had a lower LS. Conclusions The finding that LS was lowest among female patients calls for further research on symptoms, and potential risk factors. Also, certain patient profiles are linked with low LS: 'inclined abstainers' who intended to modify their behaviours, but could not do so, and 'disinclined abstainers' who had no intention of changing and were insufficiently concerned to do so. Patients who stopped smoking and perceived it as unpleasant also had low LS. 'Disinclined actors' were those patients who had to adjust their lifestyles, but were ambivalent about their intentions and the behaviour, which they continued. Health promotion programs would benefit from targeting factors that moderate the unfavourable intention-behaviour relationship and can help enhance LS.
    langue originaleAnglais
    Nombre de pages0
    journalBMC Public Health
    Volume15
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 janv. 2015

    mots-clés

    • Behavioural risk factors
    • Cardiovascular disease
    • Intention to change
    • Life satisfaction
    • Social inequalities

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