Objective: Little is known about the natural course of health-related behaviors such as tobacco smoking, at-risk alcohol use, vegetable and fruit intake and physical activity in general hospital patients after discharge. The aim was to investigate whether patients identified with at-risk alcohol use change their health-related behaviors over two years.
Methods: Eighteen to 64-year-old patients with at-risk alcohol use were identified through systematic screening as part of a randomized controlled trial. Patients with indication of an alcohol use disorder were excluded. Data of patients who received treatment as usual were analyzed (n = 220). Alcohol use, tobacco smoking, vegetable/ fruit intake, physical activity and body-mass-index were assessed at baseline, after 6, 12, 18, and 24 months. Latent growth models were calculated.
Results: Twenty-four months after discharge, participants reported less physical activity (p = .04), a higher body-mass-index (p = .01), no change in vegetable/ fruit intake (p = .11) and smoking status (p = .87), fewer cigarettes per week among smokers (p < .001), and less alcohol use (p < .001) compared to baseline.
Conclusions: The data revealed that patients with at-risk alcohol use increased or did not change energy-balance related behaviors and decreased substance-use related behaviors over 2 years after hospitalization. These findings underline the need of implementing multi-behavioral interventions into routine care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.genhosppsych.2023.02.002 | DOI Listing |
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