Associations of role, area deprivation index, and race with health behaviors and body mass index among localized prostate cancer patients and their partners
Jingle Xu, Chunxuan Ma, Rachel Hirschey, Jia Liu, Daria B. Neidre, Matthew E. Nielsen, Thomas C. Keyserling, Xianming Tan, Lixin Song

TL;DR
This study explores how role, neighborhood deprivation, and race influence health behaviors and BMI in prostate cancer patients and their partners.
Contribution
The study reveals novel interaction effects between role, area deprivation index, and race on health behaviors and BMI in prostate cancer patients and partners.
Findings
Patients smoked more and had higher BMIs than their partners.
Higher area deprivation index was linked to lower alcohol consumption and higher BMI.
Black/African American dyads showed less smoking and alcohol use but more sedentary time and higher BMI than White dyads.
Abstract
To examine the associations of role (localized prostate cancer (PCa) patient vs. their intimate partner), area deprivation index (ADI—higher scores indicating higher neighborhood deprivation levels), and race (Black/African American (AA) vs. White) with health behaviors and body mass index (BMI) among PCa patients and partners. The behaviors include smoking, alcohol consumption, diet quality, sedentary behaviors, and physical activity (PA). This study used the baseline data collected in a clinical trial. Given the nested structure of the dyadic data, multi-level models were used. Significant role-race interaction effects on smoking, ADI-race effects on alcohol consumption, and role-ADI effects on BMI were found. Meanwhile, patients smoked more cigarettes, decreased alcohol consumption, had less healthful diets, spent longer time watching TV, did fewer sedentary hobbies, had more…
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Taxonomy
TopicsReligious and Theological Studies
