Health beliefs and their influence on United Kingdom nurses' health-related behaviours

被引:0
|
作者
Callaghan, P [1 ]
机构
[1] Chinese Univ Hong Kong, Dept Nursing, Shatin, NT, Peoples R China
关键词
nurses; health beliefs; health-related behaviours;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R47 [护理学];
学科分类号
1011 ;
摘要
Background: Because there is a demonstrated empirical link between nurses' personal health habits and their tendency to raise health issues with clients, researchers suggest that nurses can improve their health promotion role if they adopt health-related behaviours, Few researchers, however, have identified the factors that influence nurses' health-related behaviours. Aims: To describe nurses' beliefs about the importance of health-related behaviours, and investigate the relationship between these beliefs and their health-related behaviours. Design: A cross-sectional survey from which nested-case control comparisons were made. Sample: One hundred and thirteen nurses attending tertiary level education courses in London and Essex. Measures: Health Behaviour Survey and a scale measuring nurses' beliefs about the importance of health-related behaviours. Results: Nurses' health beliefs significantly influenced the practice of 14 health-related behaviours. Conclusions: The findings from this study support the view that nurses' practice of many behaviours linked to health and longevity are influenced significantly by their beliefs about the importance of these behaviours, Changing nurses' beliefs about the importance of health-related behaviours through specific health promotion sessions are meaningful as they may improve nurses' health promotion role.
引用
收藏
页码:28 / 35
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] SPECIFICITY OF HEALTH-RELATED BEHAVIOURS IN MIDDLE AND LATE ADULTHOOD
    Zadworna-Cieslak, Magdalena
    Oginska-Bulik, Nina
    HEALTH PROBLEMS OF CIVILIZATION, 2018, 12 (01) : 7 - 13
  • [42] Motives and Health-related Behaviours An Investigation of Equipotentiality and Equifinality
    Aspden, Trefor
    Ingledew, David K.
    Parkinson, John A.
    JOURNAL OF HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY, 2010, 15 (03) : 467 - 479
  • [43] Drug users: oral health-related attitudes and behaviours
    P G Robinson
    S Acquah
    B Gibson
    British Dental Journal, 2005, 198 : 219 - 224
  • [44] Health-related behaviours and sickness absence from work
    Laaksonen, M.
    Piha, K.
    Martikainen, P.
    Rahkonen, O.
    Lahelma, E.
    OCCUPATIONAL AND ENVIRONMENTAL MEDICINE, 2009, 66 (12) : 840 - 847
  • [45] Urinary Incontinence and its Relationship to Mental Health and Health-Related Quality of Life in Men and Women in Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States
    Coyne, Karin S.
    Kvasz, Marion
    Ireland, Andrea M.
    Milsom, Ian
    Kopp, Zoe S.
    Chapple, Chris R.
    EUROPEAN UROLOGY, 2012, 61 (01) : 88 - 95
  • [46] Oral health behaviours and oral health-related dietary behaviours: The interrelationship and determinants by latent class analysis
    Enshaei, Zahra
    Feizi, Awat
    Saied-Moallemi, Zahra
    COMMUNITY DENTAL HEALTH, 2018, 35 (03) : 173 - 178
  • [47] Health-related behaviours mediate the relation between ethnicity and (mental) health in the Netherlands
    Erdem, Ozcan
    Riva, Elisa
    Prins, Rick G.
    Burdorf, Alex
    Van der Doef, Margot
    ETHNICITY & HEALTH, 2019, 24 (03) : 287 - 300
  • [48] Health-related behaviours in adults with diabetes - Associations with health care utilization and costs
    Plotnikoff, Ronald C.
    Karunamuni, Nandini D.
    Johnson, Jeffrey A.
    Kotovych, Maria
    Svenson, Lawrence W.
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH-REVUE CANADIENNE DE SANTE PUBLIQUE, 2008, 99 (03): : 227 - 231
  • [49] Gender and school-stage associations with health-related behaviours and health-related quality of life in Spanish children
    Knox, Emily C. L.
    Muros, Jose J.
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MENTAL HEALTH PROMOTION, 2017, 19 (05) : 278 - 288
  • [50] Adolescents' sense of coherence, oral health status, and oral health-related behaviours
    Freire, MDM
    Sheiham, A
    Hardy, R
    COMMUNITY DENTISTRY AND ORAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2001, 29 (03) : 204 - 212