Journal article 1421 views
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis
Journal of Health Psychology, Volume: 21, Issue: 10, Pages: 2347 - 2356
Swansea University Author: Paul Bennett
Full text not available from this repository: check for access using links below.
DOI (Published version): 10.1177/1359105315576351
Abstract
The study determined sub-group trajectories of change on measures of diet and exercise following acute coronary syndrome. 150 participants were assessed in hospital, and 1month and 6 months later on measures including physical activity, diet, illness beliefs, coping and mood. Change trajectories wer...
Published in: | Journal of Health Psychology |
---|---|
ISSN: | 1359-1053 1461-7277 |
Published: |
2016
|
Online Access: |
Check full text
|
URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa20811 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
first_indexed |
2015-04-22T02:08:20Z |
---|---|
last_indexed |
2020-12-17T03:34:36Z |
id |
cronfa20811 |
recordtype |
SURis |
fullrecord |
<?xml version="1.0"?><rfc1807><datestamp>2020-12-16T10:51:42.3430589</datestamp><bib-version>v2</bib-version><id>20811</id><entry>2015-04-21</entry><title>Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis</title><swanseaauthors><author><sid>20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3</sid><firstname>Paul</firstname><surname>Bennett</surname><name>Paul Bennett</name><active>true</active><ethesisStudent>false</ethesisStudent></author></swanseaauthors><date>2015-04-21</date><deptcode>FGMHL</deptcode><abstract>The study determined sub-group trajectories of change on measures of diet and exercise following acute coronary syndrome. 150 participants were assessed in hospital, and 1month and 6 months later on measures including physical activity, diet, illness beliefs, coping and mood. Change trajectories were measured using latent class growth modelling, and multinomial logistic regression was used to predict class membership. These revealed changes in exercise were confined to a sub-group of participants already reporting relatively high exercise levels; those eating less healthily evidenced modest dietary improvements. Coping, gender, depression and perceived control predicted group membership to a modest extent</abstract><type>Journal Article</type><journal>Journal of Health Psychology</journal><volume>21</volume><journalNumber>10</journalNumber><paginationStart>2347</paginationStart><paginationEnd>2356</paginationEnd><publisher/><placeOfPublication/><isbnPrint/><isbnElectronic/><issnPrint>1359-1053</issnPrint><issnElectronic>1461-7277</issnElectronic><keywords>acute coronary syndrome cohort diet exercise latent class growth modelling</keywords><publishedDay>1</publishedDay><publishedMonth>10</publishedMonth><publishedYear>2016</publishedYear><publishedDate>2016-10-01</publishedDate><doi>10.1177/1359105315576351</doi><url/><notes/><college>COLLEGE NANME</college><department>Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty</department><CollegeCode>COLLEGE CODE</CollegeCode><DepartmentCode>FGMHL</DepartmentCode><institution>Swansea University</institution><apcterm/><lastEdited>2020-12-16T10:51:42.3430589</lastEdited><Created>2015-04-21T09:05:35.4219401</Created><path><level id="1">Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences</level><level id="2">School of Psychology</level></path><authors><author><firstname>Paul</firstname><surname>Bennett</surname><order>1</order></author><author><firstname>Ewa</firstname><surname>Gruszczynska</surname><order>2</order></author><author><firstname>Victoria</firstname><surname>Marke</surname><order>3</order></author></authors><documents/><OutputDurs/></rfc1807> |
spelling |
2020-12-16T10:51:42.3430589 v2 20811 2015-04-21 Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis 20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3 Paul Bennett Paul Bennett true false 2015-04-21 FGMHL The study determined sub-group trajectories of change on measures of diet and exercise following acute coronary syndrome. 150 participants were assessed in hospital, and 1month and 6 months later on measures including physical activity, diet, illness beliefs, coping and mood. Change trajectories were measured using latent class growth modelling, and multinomial logistic regression was used to predict class membership. These revealed changes in exercise were confined to a sub-group of participants already reporting relatively high exercise levels; those eating less healthily evidenced modest dietary improvements. Coping, gender, depression and perceived control predicted group membership to a modest extent Journal Article Journal of Health Psychology 21 10 2347 2356 1359-1053 1461-7277 acute coronary syndrome cohort diet exercise latent class growth modelling 1 10 2016 2016-10-01 10.1177/1359105315576351 COLLEGE NANME Medicine, Health and Life Science - Faculty COLLEGE CODE FGMHL Swansea University 2020-12-16T10:51:42.3430589 2015-04-21T09:05:35.4219401 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Psychology Paul Bennett 1 Ewa Gruszczynska 2 Victoria Marke 3 |
title |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
spellingShingle |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis Paul Bennett |
title_short |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
title_full |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
title_fullStr |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
title_full_unstemmed |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
title_sort |
Dietary and exercise change following acute cardiac syndrome onset: A latent class growth modelling analysis |
author_id_str_mv |
20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3 |
author_id_fullname_str_mv |
20803717bf274c582f30f80916c596d3_***_Paul Bennett |
author |
Paul Bennett |
author2 |
Paul Bennett Ewa Gruszczynska Victoria Marke |
format |
Journal article |
container_title |
Journal of Health Psychology |
container_volume |
21 |
container_issue |
10 |
container_start_page |
2347 |
publishDate |
2016 |
institution |
Swansea University |
issn |
1359-1053 1461-7277 |
doi_str_mv |
10.1177/1359105315576351 |
college_str |
Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
hierarchytype |
|
hierarchy_top_id |
facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences |
hierarchy_top_title |
Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
hierarchy_parent_id |
facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences |
hierarchy_parent_title |
Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences |
department_str |
School of Psychology{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Psychology |
document_store_str |
0 |
active_str |
0 |
description |
The study determined sub-group trajectories of change on measures of diet and exercise following acute coronary syndrome. 150 participants were assessed in hospital, and 1month and 6 months later on measures including physical activity, diet, illness beliefs, coping and mood. Change trajectories were measured using latent class growth modelling, and multinomial logistic regression was used to predict class membership. These revealed changes in exercise were confined to a sub-group of participants already reporting relatively high exercise levels; those eating less healthily evidenced modest dietary improvements. Coping, gender, depression and perceived control predicted group membership to a modest extent |
published_date |
2016-10-01T03:24:38Z |
_version_ |
1763750842389757952 |
score |
11.036706 |