PublicadoEl 23/11/22 por Comillas
Artículo

Behavioral Lifestyles and Survival: A Meta-Analysis

tipo de documento semantico ckh_publication

Ficheros

2022 Behavioral Lifestyles and Survival_A Meta-Analysis.pdf
Tamaño 2761395
Formato Adobe PDF
Fecha de publicación 04/02/2022
Fuente Revista: Frontiers in Psychology, Periodo: 1, Volumen: 12, Número: , Página inicial: 1, Página final: 19
Estado info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

Resumen

Idioma es-ES
Resumen

The aim of the study is to determine the association between Behavioral Lifestyles (regular physical activity, healthy diet, sleeping, and weight control) and longevity in the elderly. A search strategy was conducted in the PsycInfo, Medline, PubMed, Web of Science (WoS), and Scopus databases. The primary outcome was mortality/survival. Four variables (mean of participant’s age at the baseline of the study, follow-up years of the study, gender, and year of publication) were analyzed to evaluate the role of potential moderators. Ninety-three articles, totaling more than 2,800,000 people, were included in the meta-analysis. We found that the lifestyles analyzed predict greater survival. Specifically, doing regular physical activity, engaging in leisure activities, sleeping 7–8 h a day, and staying outside the BMI ranges considered as underweight or obesity are habits that each separately has a greater probability associated with survival after a period of several years.

Idioma en-GB
Resumen

The aim of the study is to determine the association between Behavioral Lifestyles (regular physical activity, healthy diet, sleeping, and weight control) and longevity in the elderly. A search strategy was conducted in the PsycInfo, Medline, PubMed, Web of Science (WoS), and Scopus databases. The primary outcome was mortality/survival. Four variables (mean of participant’s age at the baseline of the study, follow-up years of the study, gender, and year of publication) were analyzed to evaluate the role of potential moderators. Ninety-three articles, totaling more than 2,800,000 people, were included in the meta-analysis. We found that the lifestyles analyzed predict greater survival. Specifically, doing regular physical activity, engaging in leisure activities, sleeping 7–8 h a day, and staying outside the BMI ranges considered as underweight or obesity are habits that each separately has a greater probability associated with survival after a period of several years.

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Tipo de archivo application/pdf
Idioma en-GB
Tipo de acceso info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
Licencia http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/es/
Fecha de modificacion 09/09/2022
Fecha de disponibilidad 04/02/2022
fecha de alta 04/02/2022

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