# The Influence of Recreational Hiking on the Prevalence of Cardiovascular and Psychiatric Diseases Among Population of Republic of Serbia

**Authors:** Milos Gostimirovic, Jovana Rajkovic, Ana Bukarica, Ljiljana Gojkovic-Bukarica

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare13060680 · Healthcare · 2025-03-20

## TL;DR

This study compares the health of hikers and the general population in Serbia, finding fewer psychiatric diseases among hikers but similar cardiovascular disease rates.

## Contribution

First comparison of cardiovascular and psychiatric health between hikers and the general population in Serbia.

## Key findings

- Hikers had a lower prevalence of psychiatric diseases compared to the general population.
- Both groups showed similar rates of cardiovascular diseases despite age differences.
- No significant differences in drug consumption were observed between the groups.

## Abstract

Background: Hiking is a physical activity recommended for people of all ages. In an era of increased incidence of cardiovascular and psychiatric diseases, directing individuals to hiking can be very important from both public health and socioeconomic perspectives. Since the health status of recreational hikers and the general population in the Republic of Serbia has not been compared yet, our objectives are to compare the health-related characteristics of those two groups, including the prevalence of comorbidities, pharmacotherapy, and drug consumption. Methods: A descriptive epidemiological study was conducted. Research questions were asked via two specially prepared questionnaires distributed through the Google Forms platform. The means of the two groups were tested by a two-sample Student t-test for independent variables. Results: The sample consisted of 259 hikers and 292 people from the general population. A total of 199 hikers (76.8%) and 218 people from the general population group (74.7%) were declared as healthy. The statistically significant differences between the groups included age, sex, education level, and body mass index. In both groups, the majority of those with pre-existing medical conditions had at least one cardiovascular disease (23.5% of the hikers and 19.5% of the individuals in the general group). Pre-existing psychiatric diseases were noted in 6% of the hikers and in 12% of those in the general group. The average durations of the disease in the hiker and general population were 11.9 and 8.4 years, respectively (p < 0.05), whereas, there were no differences in drug consumption. Conclusions: This pilot study represents the comparison of the cardiovascular and mental health among hikers and the general population in the Republic of Serbia. Although psychiatric diseases were clearly less prevalent among hikers, the prevalence and burden of cardiovascular diseases must be interpreted with caution, due to big age difference between the respondents from both groups. However, our future studies will employ objective measurements and clinical parameters rather than self-reported surveys, so that the health benefits of hiking appear more clearly.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Cardiovascular and Psychiatric Diseases (MESH:D002318), psychiatric diseases (MESH:D001523)

## Full text

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## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11942088/full.md

## References

56 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11942088/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11942088