Background The aim of this study was to examine the clustering of four major lifestyle risk factors (smoking, heavy drinking, lack of fruit and vegetables consumption, and lack of physical activity), and to examine the variation across different socio-demographic groups in the English adult population. Methods The study population was derived from the 2003 Health Survey for England (n = 11,492). Clustering was examined by comparing the observed and expected prevalence of the different possible combinations. A multinomial multilevel regression model was conducted to examine the socio-demographic variation in the clustering of the four risk factors. Results The study found that, when using British health recommendations, a majority o...
Introduction: Research examining the clustering of lifestyle risk factors (LRFS) associated with non...
Background: Evidence on the role of lifestyle factors in relation to multimorbidity, especially in e...
BackgroundThe co-occurrence of unhealthy lifestyles, calls for interventions that target multiple he...
Background The aim of this study was to examine the clustering of four major lifestyle risk factors...
Objective: Men – more than women - engage in unhealthy lifestyle practices that place them at great...
Objective: To examine clustering among three major lifestyle risk factors for chronic disease (smoki...
Background: Most chronic diseases are strongly associated with four modifiable behaviours: smoking, ...
Background: Risk behaviours, such as smoking and physical inactivity account for up to two-thirds of...
BACKGROUND: Risk behaviours, such as smoking and physical inactivity account for up to two-thirds of...
Objective: There is a growing body of literature examining the clustering of health risk behaviours,...
Given that behaviour-related risk factors cluster together in individuals and populations it is impo...
Background: To plan long-term prevention strategies and develop tailored intervention activities, it...
AbstractResearch findings indicate that health-related behaviours (HRBs) do not co-occur within indi...
Smoking, unhealthy nutrition, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity (SNAP risk behaviours) ar...
Abstract Background To plan long-term prevention strategies and develop tailored intervention activi...
Introduction: Research examining the clustering of lifestyle risk factors (LRFS) associated with non...
Background: Evidence on the role of lifestyle factors in relation to multimorbidity, especially in e...
BackgroundThe co-occurrence of unhealthy lifestyles, calls for interventions that target multiple he...
Background The aim of this study was to examine the clustering of four major lifestyle risk factors...
Objective: Men – more than women - engage in unhealthy lifestyle practices that place them at great...
Objective: To examine clustering among three major lifestyle risk factors for chronic disease (smoki...
Background: Most chronic diseases are strongly associated with four modifiable behaviours: smoking, ...
Background: Risk behaviours, such as smoking and physical inactivity account for up to two-thirds of...
BACKGROUND: Risk behaviours, such as smoking and physical inactivity account for up to two-thirds of...
Objective: There is a growing body of literature examining the clustering of health risk behaviours,...
Given that behaviour-related risk factors cluster together in individuals and populations it is impo...
Background: To plan long-term prevention strategies and develop tailored intervention activities, it...
AbstractResearch findings indicate that health-related behaviours (HRBs) do not co-occur within indi...
Smoking, unhealthy nutrition, alcohol consumption, and physical inactivity (SNAP risk behaviours) ar...
Abstract Background To plan long-term prevention strategies and develop tailored intervention activi...
Introduction: Research examining the clustering of lifestyle risk factors (LRFS) associated with non...
Background: Evidence on the role of lifestyle factors in relation to multimorbidity, especially in e...
BackgroundThe co-occurrence of unhealthy lifestyles, calls for interventions that target multiple he...