6533b7d3fe1ef96bd12600fa
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Health-related quality of life and physical activity in persons at high risk for type 2 diabetes
Tanja OnatsuPablo Tomas-carusArja HäkkinenMauri KallinenHeikki KyröläinenSalme JärvenpääAnna KukkaAri Heinonensubject
MaleGerontologySF-36PopulationType 2 diabetesMotor ActivityStatistics NonparametricQuality of lifeRisk FactorsSurveys and QuestionnairesDiabetes mellitusHealth careHumansMedicineeducationFinlandAgededucation.field_of_studyChi-Square Distributionbusiness.industryRehabilitationMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseMental healthhumanitiesDiabetes Mellitus Type 2Quality of LifeFemalebusinessChi-squared distributiondescription
The aim of this study was to compare the health-related quality of life (HRQOL) of persons at risk for type 2 diabetes to that of the Finnish general population. In addition, the associations between physical activity and HRQOL at-risk persons were studied.One hundred thirty-two at-risk persons were recruited from health care centres in Central Finland. Participants filled out questionnaires including demographic characteristics, HRQOL (SF-36), frequency of vigorous physical activity (or =2 times a week, once a week, less than once a week) and comorbidities.HRQOL of at-risk persons differed significantly from that of the Finnish population in four of the eight dimensions of SF-36. Compared with reference values of the general population, the values of at-risk persons were worse for general health and pain, but better for mental health and role limitation (emotional) dimensions. Among at-risk persons those physically more active had less depressiveness and lower body weight. HRQOL decreased linearly with decreasing physical activity in all dimensions.People with elevated risk for type 2 DM have reduced HRQOL in general health and body pain dimensions, but mental health and emotional role dimensions were better compared with that of the population. Among at-risk persons, the benefits of physical activity on HRQOL were seen in all HRQOL dimensions. Regular exercise and body weight control may improve subjective health and reduce risk for type 2 DM and its consequences.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2008-11-27 | Disability and Rehabilitation |