Factors Related to Healthy Diet and Physical Activity in Hospital-Based Clinical Nurses.

Q3 Nursing
N. Albert, R. Butler, J. Sorrell
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引用次数: 33

Abstract

Hospitals often promote healthy lifestyles, but little is known about nurses' actual diet and physical activity. Greater understanding about these lifestyle choices for clinical nurses may improve existing hospital-based programs and/or create desirable services. This article discusses a study that considered diet and physical activity of clinical nurses, using elements of Pender's self-care theory as a conceptual framework. Study methods included a cross-sectional, correlational design and a convenience sample of 278 nurses who worked on units with 24 hours/day and seven days-per-week responsibilities. Participants completed diet and exercise questionnaires about perceptions of attitudes and opinions, barriers, diet benefits/exercise motivators, self-efficacy, and locus of control, and personal and work characteristics. Diet and activity categories were created. Study results demonstrated that over 50% of nurses had moderately healthy diets but were insufficiently active. Healthy diet and physical activity levels were associated with higher self-efficacy, more diet benefits and physical activity motivators, fewer perceived barriers, and confidence in body image. The article discussion and conclusion sections note areas for future research and suggest that focused interventions that address benefits, motivators, and self-efficacy may increase participation in hospital-based programs and enhance healthy lifestyle for hospital-based clinical nurses.
医院临床护士健康饮食与身体活动的相关因素
医院经常提倡健康的生活方式,但人们对护士的实际饮食和体育活动知之甚少。临床护士对这些生活方式选择的更多了解可能会改善现有的基于医院的计划和/或创造理想的服务。本文讨论了一项研究,考虑饮食和身体活动的临床护士,使用彭德的自我保健理论的元素作为概念框架。研究方法包括横断面、相关设计和方便样本,278名护士在每天24小时、每周7天的单位工作。参与者完成了关于态度和观点、障碍、饮食益处/运动动机、自我效能感、控制点以及个人和工作特征的饮食和运动问卷。创建了饮食和活动类别。研究结果表明,超过50%的护士有中等健康的饮食,但运动不足。健康的饮食和身体活动水平与更高的自我效能感、更多的饮食益处和身体活动激励因素、更少的感知障碍和对身体形象的信心有关。文章的讨论和结论部分指出了未来研究的领域,并建议关注福利、激励因素和自我效能感的干预措施可能会增加医院项目的参与度,并增强医院临床护士的健康生活方式。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Online Journal of Issues in Nursing
Online Journal of Issues in Nursing Nursing-Issues, Ethics and Legal Aspects
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
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