AI Article Synopsis

  • Workplace health promotion programs should be tailored to specific employee needs, particularly considering age, to effectively prevent chronic diseases and enhance well-being.
  • Young employees (under 30) tend to have poorer lifestyle behaviors and higher stress levels, highlighting the need for targeted interventions.
  • Addressing lifestyle choices rather than solely focusing on medical parameters can motivate younger workers to improve their health and manage stress better.

Article Abstract

Workplace health promotion programs and services offered by insurers may play a fundamental role to foster health/well-being and to prevent chronic diseases. To this end, they should be tailored to companies/employees’ requirements and characteristics. In particular, age needs to be taken into account, considering both that young age workers are generally healthy, and that young age is the best period in lifespan to address prevention and instilling healthy behaviors. We employed an anonymous, simple web-based questionnaire (filled out by 1305 employees) which furnishes data regarding lifestyle (nutrition, exercise, smoking, stress, sleep, etc.), some of which were used to build a unique descriptor (Lifestyle Index; 0−100 higher scores being healthier). We considered three subgroups accordingly to age: ≤30; between 30 and 50; >50 years. This study showed age influences lifestyle and stress perception in the working population: the youngest employees (both men and women) presented the worst lifestyle index, particularly in its stress component. This observation may potentially be useful to tailor workplace health promotion programs and to personalize insurance protocols and services offered to employees. The practical message of our study is that in healthy young people focusing only on medical parameters (frequently within normal ranges in this cohort), albeit important, may be not sufficient to foster proactive actions to prevent chronic non-communicable diseases in adult life. Vice versa, driving their attention on current behaviors might elicit their proactive role to improve lifestyle, getting immediate advantages such as well-being improvement and the possibility to best manage stress.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9865201PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/nu15020399DOI Listing

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