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Healthy lifestyle behaviors and decreased risk of mortality in a large prospective study of U.S. women and men

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Abstract

Adiposity, insufficient physical activity, cigarette smoking, and poor diet have all been related independently to increased chronic disease risk, but their joint impact on overall health remains unclear. In a cohort of 170,672 women and men aged 51–71 years at baseline in 1996/1997 and followed-up through 2009, we investigated the individual and joint impact of four low-risk lifestyle factors: abdominal leanness (waist circumference <88 cm in women and <102 cm in men); recommended physical activity level (30 min or more of moderate exercise at least 5 times per week or 20 min or more of vigorous exercise at least 3 times per week); long-term non-smoking (never-smoker or quit smoking more than 10 years ago); and healthy diet (Mediterranean diet score within the upper two sex-specific quintiles). During 2,126,089 person-years of follow-up, 20,903 participants died. In multivariate Cox models, statistically significant decreased risks of mortality were observed for the low-risk factors abdominal leanness (relative risk (RR) = 0.86; 95 % confidence interval (CI) = 0.83–0.89), physical activity (RR = 0.86; 95 % CI = 0.84–0.89), non-smoking (RR = 0.43; 95 % CI = 0.42–0.45), and healthy diet (RR = 0.86; 95 % CI = 0.83–0.88). The larger the number of low-risk lifestyle factors, the lower was the mortality risk. The RR comparing adherence to all versus none of the factors was 0.27 (95 % CI = 0.25–0.29). We estimate that 33 % (95 % CI = 30–35 %) of deaths in our cohort were premature and could have been avoided if all study participants had adhered to all low-risk factors.

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Behrens, G., Fischer, B., Kohler, S. et al. Healthy lifestyle behaviors and decreased risk of mortality in a large prospective study of U.S. women and men. Eur J Epidemiol 28, 361–372 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10654-013-9796-9

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