4.5 Article

Modern health worries and annoyance from environmental factors are largely unrelated to smoking, alcohol consumption, and physical activity

Journal

JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOMATIC RESEARCH
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2023.111417

Keywords

Symptoms; Environmental sensitivity; Smoking; Alcohol; Physical activity

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Modern health worries, as well as environmental annoyance, are associated with symptom reporting and affective-behavioural changes. However, individuals with these worries and annoyance are not clearly characterized by a healthier lifestyle.
Objective: Modern health worries, as well as environmental annoyance from chemical agents, noise, and electromagnetic exposure are associated with symptom reporting and marked affective-behavioural changes. As promotion and protection of health is a primary characteristic of these conditions, it can be expected that they will be related to less risk behaviour (smoking and alcohol consumption) and more health behaviour (physical activity), both cross-sectionally and longitudinally.Methods: Hypotheses were tested in a sample of 2336 individuals participating in T1 and T2 data collection (3 years apart) of the Va & BULL;sterbotten Environmental Health Study, Sweden. Health-related behaviours were assessed using single self-report questions. Smoking was measured on a binary (yes-or-no) scale; frequency of alcohol consumption and physical activity was measured on a 5-point and a 4-point scale, respectively.Results: Modern health worries showed no cross-sectional association with the three behaviours, whereas annoyance was typically inversely, very weakly, related to smoking and alcohol consumption. Physical activity was significantly positively associated only with chemical annoyance. None of the variables significantly predicted change of behaviours at T2 after controlling for the respective T1 value and demographic variables.Conclusions: Individuals with high levels of modern health worries and annoyance from various environmental agents are not clearly characterized by a healthier lifestyle. Perhaps they focus on the alleviation of their existing symptoms; alternatively, somatic symptom distress decreases their cognitive-affective resources necessary for a long-term life style change.

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