The effectiveness of the “SMG” model for health-promoting lifestyles among empty nesters: a community intervention trial

Nov 10, 2019Health and quality of life outcomes

Testing the SMG model to improve healthy lifestyles in older adults living alone

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Abstract

After 7 months of intervention, the score increased significantly in the intervention group with a mean score of 8.838.

  • The intervention group showed increases in all dimensions of the Health-Promoting Lifestyle Profile compared to the control group.
  • Significant improvements were observed in self-realization, health responsibility, physical activity, nutrition, interpersonal relations, and stress management.
  • Education was found to contribute positively to the effectiveness of the health-promoting lifestyle intervention.
  • The findings suggest that the 'SMG' model may be a viable approach to improve the lifestyles of empty nesters.

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Key numbers

8.838
Increase in HPLP-C Score
Mean score change in the intervention group compared to baseline.
1.443
Increase in Self-Realization Score
Mean score change in self-realization dimension of HPLP-C.
1.492
Increase in Health Responsibility Score
Mean score change in health responsibility dimension of HPLP-C.

Full Text

What this is

  • The study investigates the impact of the "SMG" model on health-promoting lifestyles among empty nesters in China.
  • It involved 350 empty nesters randomly assigned to either an intervention or control group.
  • The intervention aimed to improve health behaviors through self-management, mutual management, and group management strategies.

Essence

  • The "SMG" model significantly improved health-promoting lifestyle scores among empty nesters after a 7-month intervention, particularly in areas such as self-realization and physical activity.

Key takeaways

  • The intervention group showed an increase in (HPLP-C) scores, with a mean score change of 8.838 (95% CI: 6.369–11.306) compared to the control group.
  • Significant improvements were observed in dimensions such as self-realization (mean change = 1.443, 95% CI: 0.352–2.534) and health responsibility (mean change = 1.492, 95% CI: 0.477–2.508).
  • Education level influenced intervention outcomes, with higher HPLP-C scores associated with participants who had secondary education or above.

Caveats

  • The study relied on subjective self-reported measures, which may introduce bias or inaccuracies in the data collected.
  • The short duration of the intervention limits the ability to assess long-term effects and sustainability of lifestyle changes.

Definitions

  • Health-Promoting Lifestyle Profile (HPLP-C): A questionnaire used to assess health-promoting behaviors across various dimensions, such as nutrition and physical activity.

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