What are the barriers to adoption of a lifestyle associated with optimal peak bone mass acquisition? A qualitative study of young adults in New Zealand
What are the barriers to adoption of a lifestyle associated with optimal peak bone mass acquisition? A qualitative study of young adults in New Zealand
Objective: this study aimed to investigate the barriers to adopting lifestyle factors other than physical activity important for optimal peak bone mass (PBM) acquisition—namely, dietary factors, avoidance of cigarette smoking, and keeping alcohol consumption within recommended limits.
Materials and Methods: university students and staff aged 18–35 years were recruited. Six semi-structured, in-depth focus group interviews were conducted with a total of 28 participants. The interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed. A thematic approach for data analysis using a constant comparative method was performed using NVivo software.
Results: three major themes emerged: socio-cultural barriers (peer pressure and cultural norms); personal barriers (time, cost, and diet preferences); and other barriers (medical illness and lack of symptoms associated with low bone mass density).
Conclusions: we identified several barriers to adoption of lifestyle behaviours that might be beneficial to PBM acquisition. These data might facilitate the development of public health interventions designed to help young adults embrace osteoprotective lifestyles, and hence reduce the burden of osteoporotic fracture in later life.
31-40
Zafar, Sana
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Denison, Hayley J.
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Patel, Hansa
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Dennison, Elaine
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Zafar, Sana
f75aac4d-6003-49ba-bb83-12191950efc6
Denison, Hayley J.
65475cfd-bdb1-4b02-844e-b2e8f0b1ac46
Patel, Hansa
225c6f1f-afd2-401e-8b1b-fdb6ed39b410
Dennison, Elaine
ee647287-edb4-4392-8361-e59fd505b1d1
Zafar, Sana, Denison, Hayley J., Patel, Hansa and Dennison, Elaine
(2022)
What are the barriers to adoption of a lifestyle associated with optimal peak bone mass acquisition? A qualitative study of young adults in New Zealand.
Osteology, 2 (1), .
(doi:10.3390/osteology2010004).
Abstract
Objective: this study aimed to investigate the barriers to adopting lifestyle factors other than physical activity important for optimal peak bone mass (PBM) acquisition—namely, dietary factors, avoidance of cigarette smoking, and keeping alcohol consumption within recommended limits.
Materials and Methods: university students and staff aged 18–35 years were recruited. Six semi-structured, in-depth focus group interviews were conducted with a total of 28 participants. The interviews were digitally recorded and transcribed. A thematic approach for data analysis using a constant comparative method was performed using NVivo software.
Results: three major themes emerged: socio-cultural barriers (peer pressure and cultural norms); personal barriers (time, cost, and diet preferences); and other barriers (medical illness and lack of symptoms associated with low bone mass density).
Conclusions: we identified several barriers to adoption of lifestyle behaviours that might be beneficial to PBM acquisition. These data might facilitate the development of public health interventions designed to help young adults embrace osteoprotective lifestyles, and hence reduce the burden of osteoporotic fracture in later life.
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osteology-02-00004
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Accepted/In Press date: 1 February 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 February 2022
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 475249
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/475249
ISSN: 2673-4036
PURE UUID: 74a85acf-f3ff-4f72-bf69-f9664bcc8b37
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Date deposited: 14 Mar 2023 17:48
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:43
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Author:
Sana Zafar
Author:
Hayley J. Denison
Author:
Hansa Patel
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