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Health Behaviours and Potentially Preventable Hospitalisation: A Prospective Study of Older Australian Adults
Authors:Bich Tran  Michael O Falster  Kirsty Douglas  Fiona Blyth  Louisa R Jorm
Institution:1. Centre for Health Research, School of Medicine, University of Western Sydney, Campbelltown, NSW, Australia.; 2. Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia.; 3. The Sax Institute, Haymarket, NSW, Australia.; 4. Concord Clinical School, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.; Newcastle University, United Kingdom,
Abstract:

Objective

Several studies have demonstrated the effects of health behaviours on risk of chronic diseases and mortality, but none have investigated their contribution to potentially preventable hospitalisation (PPH). We aimed to quantify the effects on risk of PPH of six health behaviours: smoking; alcohol consumption; physical activity; fruit and vegetables consumption; sitting time; and sleeping time.

Design/Setting

Prospective observational study in New South Wales, Australia.

Subjects

267,006 men and women aged 45 years and over.

Outcome Measures

PPH admissions and mortality during follow-up according to individual positive health behaviours (non-smoking, <14 alcoholic drinks per week, ≥2.5 hours of physical activity per week, ≥2 servings of fruit and 5 servings of vegetables per day, <8 hours sitting and ≥7 hours sleeping per day) and the total number of these behaviours.

Results

During an average of 3 years follow-up, 20971 (8%) participants had at least one PPH admission. After adjusting for potential confounders, participants who reported all six positive health behaviours at baseline had 46% lower risk of PPH admission (95% CI 0.48–0.61), compared to those who reported having only one of these behaviours. Based on these risk estimates, approximately 29% of PPH admissions in Australians aged 45 years and over were attributable to not adhering to the six health behaviours. Estimates were similar for acute, chronic and vaccine-preventable categories of PPH admissions.

Conclusions

Individual and combined positive health behaviours were associated with lower risk of PPH admission. These findings suggest that there is a significant opportunity to reduce PPH by promoting healthy behaviours.
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