Design and development of an instrument to measure overall lifestyle habits for epidemiological research: the Mediterranean Lifestyle (MEDLIFE) index.

Auteur(s) :
Sotos-prieto M., Penalvo JL., Ordovas JM., Moreno-Franco B., Casasnovas JA., León-Muñoz LM.
Date :
Juil, 2014
Source(s) :
Public Health Nutr.. # p
Adresse :
Department of Epidemiology,Atherothrombosis,and Imaging,Centro Nacional de Investigaciones Cardiovasculares (CNIC),28029 Madrid,Spain. [email protected]

Sommaire de l'article

OBJECTIVE
To design and develop a questionnaire that can account for an individual's adherence to a Mediterranean lifestyle including the assessment of diet and physical activity patterns, as well as social interaction.

DESIGN
The Mediterranean Lifestyle (MEDLIFE) index was created based on the current Spanish Mediterranean food guide pyramid. MEDLIFE is a twenty-eight-item derived index consisting of questions about food consumption (fifteen items), traditional Mediterranean dietary habits (seven items) and physical activity, rest and social interaction habits (six items). Linear regression models and Spearman rank correlation were fitted to assess content validity and internal consistency.

SETTING
A subset of participants in the Aragon Workers' Health Study cohort (Zaragoza, Spain) provided the data for development of MEDLIFE.

SUBJECTS
Participants (n 988) of the Aragon Workers' Health Study cohort in Spain.

RESULTS
Mean MEDLIFE score was 11·3 (sd 2·6; range: 0-28), and the quintile distribution of MEDLIFE score showed a significant association with each of the individual items as well as with specific nutrients and lifestyle indicators (intra-validity). We also quantified MEDLIFE correspondence with previously reported diet quality indices and found significant correlations (? range: 0·44-0·53; P<0·001) for the Alternate Healthy Eating Index, the Alternate Mediterranean Diet Index and Mediterranean Diet Adherence Screener.

CONCLUSIONS
MEDLIFE is the first index to include an overall assessment of lifestyle habits. It is expected to be a more holistic tool to measure adherence to the Mediterranean lifestyle in epidemiological studies.

Source : Pubmed
Retour