December 6, 2016 /
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Julia M. Balto , BS; Ipek Ensari , PhD; Elizabeth A. Hubbard MS; Naiman Khan , PhD, RD; Jennifer L. Barnes , PhD, RD; Robert W. Motl , PhD
From the Department of Kinesiology and Community Health (JMB, IE, EAH, NK, RWM) and Division of Nutritional Sciences (NK), University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, USA; Department of Family and Consumer Sciences, Illinois State University, Bloomington, IL, USA (JLB); and Department of Physical Therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL, USA (RWM).
Correspondence: Robert W. Motl, PhD, Department of Physical Therapy, University of Alabama at Birmingham, School of Health Professions 336, Birmingham, AL; e-mail: robmotl@uab. edu.
Background: Smoking, poor nutrition, excess alcohol consumption, and insufficient physical activity underlie most preventable causes of morbidity in the general population and are possibly associated with co-morbidities and health outcomes in MS. However, the frequency of co-occurrence of these risk factors among people with MS remains unclear.
Methods: Sixty-nine participants with MS completed self-report measures of smoking status, nutrition, alcohol use, physical activity levels, and sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. The data were analyzed using ttests and χ2 analyses in SPSS Statistics 22.0.
Results: Poor diet was the most common risk factor, with 85.5% of the sample not meeting dietary guidelines. Of participants with two or more risk factors, 90.3% were not meeting dietary and physical activity guidelines. There were differential rates of meeting physical activity guidelines between men and women (χ2 = 7.5, P = .01) such that 73% of women were not meeting physical activity guidelines compared with 38% of men. There were further differential rates of the most commonly co-occurring risk factors, insufficient physical activity and poor nutrition by sex (χ2 = 4.2, P = .05), such that 65% of women reported the co-occurrence of insufficient physical activity and poor diet compared with 38% of men.
Conclusion: Our results indicate that: a) an overwhelming 85.5% of the sample was not meeting nutrition guidelines; b) 90.3% of participants with two or more risk factors reported the co-occurrence of poor diet and insufficient levels of physical activity; and c) physical activity levels and the total number of SNAP risk factors varied across sex.
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