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A Mediterranean Lifestyle Is Associated With Lower Hypertension Prevalence and Better Aerobic Capacity Among New England Firefighter Recruits

Fan‐Yun Lan, Alejandro Fernández‐Montero, Ioanna Yiannakou, Orestes Marinos-Iatrides, Jacob T. Ankeny, Jeffrey Kiser, Costas A. Christophi, David C. Christiani, Mercedes Sotos‐Prieto, Stefanos N. Kales

2020Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine22 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Examine the association between healthy Mediterranean lifestyle practices and cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk factors among New England firefighter recruits. METHODS: A MEDI-Lifestyle score was used to measure adherence to a Mediterranean lifestyle (not smoking, increased physical activity, high adherence to Mediterranean diet, non-obese body mass index, decreased screen time, adequate nightly sleep, and napping) among the recruits. MEDI-Lifestyle scores were cross-sectionally analyzed with blood pressure, aerobic capacity, and other CVD risk factors. RESULTS: Among 92 recruits, high adherence to MEDI-Lifestyle was significantly associated with a decreased risk of prevalent hypertension (odds ratio [OR] = 0.14 [0.03-0.71]) and a greater probability of high aerobic capacity (OR = 5.80 [1.05-32.05]) as compared with low adherence in age- and sex-adjusted analyses. CONCLUSIONS: Increased adherence to MEDI-Lifestyle is associated with a better CVD risk profile in firefighter recruits.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineMediterranean dietBody mass indexAerobic capacityOdds ratioBlood pressureAerobic exercisePhysical therapyEnvironmental healthDemographyGerontologyInternal medicineSociologyOccupational Health and PerformanceObesity, Physical Activity, DietSleep and related disorders
A Mediterranean Lifestyle Is Associated With Lower Hypertension Prevalence and Better Aerobic Capacity Among New England Firefighter Recruits | Litcius