AI Article Synopsis

  • - Research indicates that participating in cultural activities may lead to improved health outcomes, yet there is a lack of large-scale studies exploring the link between cultural engagement and biological health markers.
  • - The study aimed to analyze the connection between various patterns of cultural engagement (active and passive) and biological indicators of health, utilizing a large dataset while controlling for multiple factors like age, gender, and socioeconomic status.
  • - Results showed that individuals with higher cultural engagement had better biological health markers, such as decreased waist circumference, although many of these benefits were influenced by other related factors, underscoring the importance of considering individual characteristics in these findings.

Article Abstract

Background: Research has shown that cultural activities may bring about improved health. However, large-scale quantitative analyses on cultural engagement and biomarkers are lacking to date. As a result, the mechanisms through which cultural activities may be associated with health are unclear.

Aim: Test quantitative associations between cultural engagement pattern (including active and passive engagement in arts, sports, and heritage activities) and indicators of biological dysregulation in a large dataset.

Subjects And Methods: data were used to conduct cross-sectional linear regression analyses between a data-driven latent class model of cultural engagement and indicators of anthropometric, cardiovascular, metabolic, immune, and neuroendocrine function. Analyses were adjusted for age, gender, ethnicity, childcare responsibility, urbanicity, leisure time satisfaction, capacity-related factors, socioeconomic position, social and economic capital indicators, physical activity, and medication use.

Results: More culturally participants had better indicators of biological health, such as lower waist circumference and fibrinogen blood concentration. Specific associations between cultural engagement pattern and the different biological outcomes were also observed. The associations were explained in part by correlated factors (accounting for around half of the association).

Conclusions: Cultural engagement is cross-sectionally associated with biomarkers, although the characteristics of people who engage with culture are an important consideration when interpreting these findings.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03014460.2024.2399276DOI Listing

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