Loneliness and its cross-sectional associations with health, health behaviours, and perceptions in Finnish patients with overweight or obesity taking part in the Healthy Weight Coaching.

Loneliness and its cross-sectional associations with health, health behaviours, and perceptions in Finnish patients with overweight or obesity taking part in the Healthy Weight Coaching.

Publication date: Aug 01, 2024

To investigate cross-sectional associations between loneliness and health, health behaviours, and perceptions in Finnish individuals with overweight or obesity (BMI ≥25 kg/m). We used baseline data from patients participating, in 2016-2022, in a real-life digital 12-month weight management program known as Healthy Weight Coaching. Patients completed several questionnaires such as those related to loneliness, healthcare resource utilization, physical activity, and life satisfaction. BMI was computed based on self-reported weight and height. In addition to investigating individual health variables, we studied the association between loneliness and factor-analysis-derived health and wellbeing clusters. Data were available from 2000 individuals (16. 7% men, median age 48 years, median BMI 39. 2 kg/m). Altogether, 11. 6%, 42. 4%, and 46. 0% reported feeling lonely, somewhat lonely, and not lonely, respectively. Feeling lonely was associated with higher BMI, greater healthcare resource utilization, lower life satisfaction, burdensomeness of life, more negative perceptions related to obesity and to the upcoming coaching, lower daytime energy, and reduced 20-min brisk walk results, a measure of functional capacity. Of the five factor-analysis-derived clusters, loneliness was adversely associated with “Life satisfaction” [lonely, 0. 337 (0. 270-0. 421), p

Concepts Keywords
Coaching Adult
Finnish Body Mass Index
Obesity Cross-Sectional Studies
Exercise
Female
Finland
Health
Health Behavior
Health behaviours
Healthcare resource utilization
Humans
Loneliness
Loneliness
Male
Mentoring
Middle Aged
Obesity
Overweight
Perceptions
Surveys and Questionnaires
Weight Reduction Programs

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Loneliness
disease MESH overweight
disease MESH obesity
disease MESH weight loss
disease IDO intervention

Original Article

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