Associations between healthy lifestyle and mortality across different social environments: a study among adults with frailty from the UK Biobank

Author:

Tang Junhan1,Ma Yanan2,Hoogendijk Emiel O3,Chen Jie4ORCID,Yue Jirong5ORCID,Wu Chenkai1

Affiliation:

1. Global Health Research Center, Duke Kunshan University , Kunshan, Jiangsu, China

2. Department of Biostatistics and Epidemiology, School of Public Health, China Medical University , Shenyang, Liaoning, China

3. Department of Epidemiology & Data Science, Amsterdam Public Health Research Institute, Amsterdam UMC—location VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam , The Netherlands

4. Center for Global Health, Zhejiang University School of Medicine , Hangzhou, Zhejiang, China

5. Department of Geriatrics and National Clinical Research Center for Geriatrics, West China Hospital, Sichuan University , Chengdu, Sichuan, China

Abstract

Abstract Background Among people living with frailty, adherence to a healthy lifestyle may be a low-cost and effective strategy to decrease frailty-induced health risks across different social environments. Methods We included 15 594 frail participants at baseline from the UK Biobank study. We used four lifestyle factors to create a composite healthy lifestyle score and 17 social factors to construct a polysocial score. We classified the lifestyle score into two levels (unhealthy and healthy) and the polysocial score into three levels (low, intermediate and high). We used Cox regression to determine the association of each lifestyle factor and lifestyle score with all-cause mortality, respectively. We also examined the associations across polysocial score categories. We evaluated the joint association of the lifestyle score and the categorical polysocial score with all-cause mortality. Results During up to 14.41 follow-up years, we documented 3098 all-cause deaths. After multivariable adjustment, we found a significant association between not smoking and adequate physical activity with all-cause mortality across polysocial score categories, respectively. We also found a significant association between a healthy diet and all-cause mortality among frail participants living in an intermediate social environment. A healthy lifestyle was associated with a lower all-cause mortality risk across polysocial score categories, especially among those with a low polysocial score. Conclusions Adherence to a healthy lifestyle, particularly not smoking, adequate physical activity and a healthy diet, may provide a feasible solution to decreasing mortality risk among frail adults across different social environments, especially for those in the socially disadvantaged group.

Funder

Jiangsu Provincial Department of Education

Wuhan University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health

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