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1 ing online health information to appropriate health behaviors).
2 emographic factors, depressive symptoms, and health behaviors).
3 ndependent of objective social isolation and health behavior.
4 theory towards understanding the dynamics of health behavior.
5  be affected by genetics, chronic stress and health behaviors.
6 erage longitudinal changes in both place and health behaviors.
7 (MI), is potentially useful in changing oral health behaviors.
8 aist circumference, depressive symptoms, and health behaviors.
9 guidance and support for improving key daily health behaviors.
10 ses, but also indirectly, through changes in health behaviors.
11 ionships were maintained after adjusting for health behaviors.
12 rates intervention on working conditions and health behaviors.
13 fect, depressed mood, health indicators, and health behaviors.
14  and children based on 7 CVD risk factors or health behaviors.
15 e to 1 (OR = 1.12) and >/=2 (OR = 0.94) poor health behaviors.
16 itality may influence coronary health is via health behaviors.
17 ct and influence on subsequent lifestyle and health behaviors.
18 g emotional distress, social adjustment, and health behaviors.
19 digital smartwatch study to help monitor his health behaviors.
20 ons, and subsequently considered the role of health behaviors.
21  chemotherapy, sociodemographic factors, and health behaviors.
22 ociodemographic characteristics and relevant health behaviors.
23 the many ways the food environment may shape health behaviors.
24 rventions may be effective in improving some health behaviors.
25 rimordial prevention of risk factors through health behaviors.
26  modification information about CAD improved health behaviors.
27 on BMI, demographics, SES, genetic data, and health behaviors.
28 n who maintained relatively higher levels of health behaviors (1 s.d. above the mean) appeared to be
29 discussions or recommendations for all three health behaviors (10% of survivors v 9% of AWCs; P = .57
30 o dental care, 2) symptoms and diagnosis, 3) health behaviors, 4) oral treatments, 5) oral prevention
31  (4) addressed culture related to health and health behaviors, (5) related to self-care or elements o
32  to be a causal mechanism in a wide range of health behaviors, a measurable trait that predicts behav
33 act of cancer on adult survivors' health and health behaviors, a review was conducted to determine (1
34 dolescents are a vulnerable population, with health behaviors, access, and outcomes shaped by social
35 ability, and self-reported global health), 4 health behaviors (aerobic exercise, stretching and stren
36 f SES and personality risk were explained by health behaviors, although some residual risk remained u
37  friends diagnosed with EVD) and EVD-related health behaviors among 1,008 adults (98% response rate)
38 greater rates of some positive self-reported health behaviors among those exposed compared with emplo
39            Overall, prevalences of all three health behaviors among young adults were fairly stable b
40 er than 18 years, the study did not assess a health behavior and disease outcome, or the article did
41 nce to understand and contribute to improved health behavior and health outcomes.
42         Using network simulations that model health behavior and infectious disease spread, we find t
43 aralleled opportunities to assess and modify health behavior and thus accelerate the ability of scien
44 sider the impact of culture and ethnicity on health behavior and ultimately health outcomes.
45 hazard ratio (HR) after adjustment for other health behaviors and baseline characteristics 0.56 (95%
46 ose has been linked with a range of positive health behaviors and biological processes that are poten
47  we examined the relationships between these health behaviors and cause-specific mortality in a prosp
48 -year change in cognitive function with oral health behaviors and conditions in the Atherosclerosis R
49 models used cognitive change to predict oral health behaviors and conditions with adjustment for cova
50 can be an effective way to increase positive health behaviors and decrease negative health behaviors;
51 ntion can reduce emotional distress, improve health behaviors and dose-intensity, and enhance immune
52                 Examining the differences in health behaviors and environment between Hispanic groups
53  prevalence of poor, intermediate, and ideal health behaviors and factors and also computed a composi
54 tion prevalence of individual cardiovascular health behaviors and factors was estimated according to
55     At baseline, blacks engaged in more poor health behaviors and had a lower prevalence of depressio
56 lth is defined by the presence of both ideal health behaviors and ideal health factors.
57 ness of MI compared with CE in changing oral health behaviors and improving oral health of dental pat
58  of stimulating patients to adopt beneficial health behaviors and increase their self-efficacy expect
59 ition of a population affect the adoption of health behaviors and innovations?
60 nces in life expectancy were correlated with health behaviors and local area characteristics.
61                                              Health behaviors and medical risk factors accounted for
62                    After adjusting for adult health behaviors and medical risk factors, this pattern
63 HCV patients indicates the extent of adverse health behaviors and mental and physical comorbidities a
64  of coherence (SOC) has been related to oral health behaviors and oral-health-related quality of life
65 t remained significant after controlling for health behaviors and other potential confounders, includ
66 ly-relevant misinformation-shapes Americans' health behaviors and policy preferences is an important
67 eed for primary care professionals to review health behaviors and pregnancy risk at all adolescent en
68 isk factors, C-reactive protein, and several health behaviors and psychosocial risk factors, suggesti
69   We assessed perceived neighborhood safety, health behaviors and SES via survey.
70                         After adjustment for health behaviors and SES, neighborhood socioeconomic dis
71  cardiometabolic risk factors, adjusting for health behaviors and socioeconomic status (SES) among Af
72 ntrolling for a range of covariates, such as health behaviors and socioeconomic status, and left-cens
73                      The interaction between health behaviors and stress was nonsignificant for white
74 other than smoking, the relationship between health behaviors and survival is unclear.
75 ormation for reconstructing salient lifetime health behaviors and underscore the need for careful int
76                        Widespread changes in health behaviors and use of treatments for these risk fa
77 e diet or increase physical activity changed health behaviors and was associated with small improveme
78 rogrammatic research on which targets change health behaviors and which techniques change those targe
79  have employed multifaceted approaches using health behaviors and/or statuses.
80  outcomes potentially modifiable by altering health behaviors and/or treating endocrine abnormalities
81  a convergence of significant psychological, health behavior, and biologic effects after a psychologi
82              Adjusting for sociodemographic, health behavior, and clinical characteristics, we used P
83 nd neck cancer, controlling for demographic, health behavior, and clinical variables.
84 n models that adjusted for sociodemographic, health behavior, and dietary factors, there was an inver
85 emographic, family structure, socioeconomic, health behavior, and health status-are associated with l
86  (nativity, education, race, parity) health, health behavior, and psychosocial characteristics (ambiv
87 proved effective in improving health status, health behavior, and self-efficacy variables for up to 9
88 th care use, health-related quality of life, health behaviors, and arthritis self-efficacy.
89 on adjusted for sociodemographic covariates, health behaviors, and chronic conditions.
90 raphic factors, season of blood measurement, health behaviors, and comorbid conditions, 25-hydroxyvit
91 ardiovascular risk, reported poor preventive health behaviors, and delayed seeking care for symptoms,
92  functional decline and comorbid conditions, health behaviors, and economic factors.
93 evelopment can have adverse effects on adult health behaviors, and genetic vulnerabilities may enhanc
94 nger, were more likely to engage in positive health behaviors, and had lower depression scores at eac
95 dels indicated that socioeconomic resources, health behaviors, and health status attenuated the assoc
96 al hazards models adjusted for demographics, health behaviors, and health status were used to calcula
97 hildhood and adult SES, controlling for age, health behaviors, and health status.
98 gnancy was associated with comorbidity, poor health behaviors, and lower recall of memory-related PTS
99 tegies to reduce stress, improve mood, alter health behaviors, and maintain adherence to cancer treat
100 differences in demographics, health factors, health behaviors, and medical access.
101 e of this study was to assess the effects of health behaviors, and other mediating pathways, separate
102 d to psychosocial well-being, mental health, health behaviors, and physical health in young adults.
103 ected from the survey included demographics, health behaviors, and QOL as measured by Short Form-36 (
104 xplained by differences in chronic diseases, health behaviors, and quality of care.
105 port cards lead to changes in weight-related health behaviors, and there is no evidence to suggest th
106 ontrol for confounders (demographic, health, health-behavior, and social factors), among positive psy
107             Additionally, stress systems and health behaviors are altered in ELA, which may contribut
108                                              Health behaviors are thought to be a potential target fo
109 dministered measures included health status, health behavior, arthritis self-efficacy, medical care u
110                           Levels of IL-6 and health behaviors associated with IL-6 were measured acro
111                                              Health behaviors attenuated the risk of all-cause and CV
112 re improvement in adherence with a change in health behavior attitudes.
113 se economic opportunity is known to motivate health behavior, banning affirmative action policies may
114 sm has been linked with an array of positive health behaviors, biological processes, and cardiovascul
115 ng impact on physiological wear-and-tear via health behaviors, BMI, and socioeconomic factors in adul
116                We examined the role of adult health behaviors, body mass index (BMI), and socioeconom
117            Financial incentives promote many health behaviors, but effective ways to deliver health i
118 with better health (mental and physical) and health behaviors, but its link with patterns of health c
119 l for improving maternal health outcomes and health behaviors, but medically vulnerable and underserv
120 al economics principles to policy making and health behaviors, but there are limited data on applying
121      Promoting healthy weight and addressing health behaviors can contribute to favorable health outc
122 GS patients, respectively, reported making a health behavior change after 6 months.
123 s of diverse healthcare providers to promote health behavior change and successful diabetes self-care
124 understanding the mechanisms underlying oral health behavior change and variables that may mediate or
125              How can progress in research on health behavior change be accelerated?
126                     In addition, the role of health behavior change in optimizing and maintaining ben
127 he effects of a telephone-delivered multiple health behavior change intervention (CanChange) on healt
128 e health interventions appear to be a viable health behavior change intervention modality for youth.
129  but few studies have developed translatable health behavior change interventions.
130 st progress has been made on the creation of health behavior change programs that effectively reduce
131 key question that will enable the science of health behavior change to improve public health: What st
132 scussed, including ways to maximize parental health behavior change, assess mediators that account fo
133 ental health and substance abuse conditions, health behavior change, life stresses and crises, and st
134 out quitting; however, contrary to models of health behavior change, they do not appear to alter inte
135 to reduce CVD risk should primarily focus on health behavior change.
136  exposure to persuasive messages can predict health behavior change.
137 rospective research on racial disparities in health behavior changes after diagnosis is desperately n
138 stablished, but it is unclear whether making health behavior changes as an adult can still alter coro
139 s and 6 months and test-related distress and health behavior changes at 12 months.
140                                    Patients' health behavior changes were surveyed 6 months after rec
141 ants in the AD+CAD groups also reported more health behavior changes, regardless of APOE genotype.
142  by quintile of factor and index scores, and health behavior characteristics.
143 ocioeconomic variables, personality factors, health behaviors, chronic illness, and depression sympto
144 h factors (BP, cholesterol, and glucose) and health behaviors (cigarette smoking, physical activity,
145 ere generated with SUDAAN software for three health behaviors: cigarette smoking, binge drinking, and
146 isability after adjustment for demographics, health behaviors, clinical and subclinical disease, and
147 iation was attenuated by adjustment for poor health behaviors, comorbid health conditions, and potent
148 alidity of current recall of tobacco-related health behaviors, compared with prospective self-report
149 mate the US prevalence and psychological and health behavior correlates of low back pain and/or neck
150 the factors underlying such changes in sleep health behaviors could help inform public health recomme
151 based on 15 demographic, health history, and health behavior covariates.
152  genetic and environmental interaction and 1 health behavior (CRC screening) were assessed.
153 orld, household surveys provide high-quality health behavior data integral to public health program m
154                    Demographic, medical, and health behavior data were determined by chart abstractio
155 ich the effect of obesity in the presence of health behaviors (dental visiting behavior and diabetes)
156 life, dietary assessment, physical activity, health behaviors, depression, cognitive function, health
157                       Further adjustment for health behaviors did not meaningfully change the finding
158 lesterol, and fasting plasma glucose, better health behaviors (diet, physical activity, and alcohol c
159                                           CV health behaviors (diet, physical activity, body mass ind
160 c system that changes with host development, health, behavior, diet, and microbe-microbe interactions
161 ined significant after further adjusting for health behaviors (drinking, smoking, and caloric intake)
162 We evaluated whether asking caretakers about health behaviors during EPI visits led to changes in tho
163  by diagnoses of pregnancy complications and health behaviors during pregnancy.
164 orkers tallying responses to questions about health behaviors during routine immunizations and provid
165 vels), subjective (e.g., self-efficacy), and health behaviors (e.g., medication adherence).
166 ed sleep), depressive symptoms, and negative health behaviors (e.g., poor diet, a sedentary lifestyle
167 sis on establishment of ideal cardiovascular health behaviors early in life is essential for maintena
168 ed effect was 59% (for two or more ACEs) via health behaviors, education level, and wealth.
169           Variation in selected pretreatment health behaviors (eg, smoking, fruit intake, and physica
170 relevant to behavioral cardiology, including health behaviors, emotions, mental mindsets, stress mana
171 ficantly increased overall adoption of a new health behavior, especially among those most in need of
172                        We found that harmful health behaviors, experiences, and outcomes were more co
173  leads to worse health at birth through poor health behaviors; exposure to harmful environmental fact
174  fibromyalgia and fits a counseling model of health behavior familiar to clinicians.
175 cations aimed at physical activity and other health behaviors, few have been based on theoretically d
176 nalyzed, private SC was associated with oral health behaviors (flossing, use of mouthrinse, and denta
177 r social mobilization and promoting positive health behaviors for other priority health programs like
178   Integrated TWH interventions might improve health behaviors (for example, reduce tobacco use and se
179 ine health factors, depressive symptoms, and health behaviors (fully adjusted model: risk ratio, 0.91
180 intervention; (3) staying abreast of current health behavior guidelines for cancer survivors and exis
181 of the association between job stressors and health behaviors has a long history that has been marked
182 aracteristics, depression) and intermediary (health behaviors, health conditions) variables.
183                                       Adding health behaviors, health conditions, and depression atte
184 itive health behaviors and decrease negative health behaviors; however, those at highest risk are oft
185  to change their behavior, and does changing health behavior improve health outcomes with minimal har
186 y or secondary capacity to promote or modify health behavior in youth 18 years or younger.
187 ck and neck pain, psychological factors, and health behaviors in a representative sample of US commun
188 e studies of the impact of ELA on health and health behaviors in adulthood.
189 ares tended to overstate the significance of health behaviors in BMI, while results from single-equat
190 ne phenotype, altered stress parameters, and health behaviors in individuals with ELA (n = 42) and th
191 urvey and EPI-CM to collect data on 4 infant health behaviors in Mali at 2 time points (8 total compa
192 n experience or behavior can explain hearing health behaviors in older adults with hearing loss.
193 l exposures to Ebola virus disease (EVD) and health behaviors in post-conflict West Africa.
194 ntially modifiable psychological factors and health behaviors in these populations.
195   The low prevalence of ideal cardiovascular health behaviors in US adolescents, particularly physica
196 esponses to stress may have consequences for health behaviors in women with GA/GG genotypes.
197  education level, body mass index (BMI), and health behaviors (including smoking and exercise habits)
198 iteracy was associated with deleterious oral health behaviors, including nighttime bottle use and no
199   Psychological distress also predicted poor health behaviors, including smoking, alcohol use, fatigu
200 cts (2.0%) had all 4 components of the ideal health behaviors index and 27 (1.4%) had all 3 component
201 t of cardiovascular health and the AHA ideal health behaviors index and ideal health factors index we
202 ive approach to improve newborn survival and health behavior indicators in rural Bangladesh.
203                         Cancer treatment and health behaviors influence the magnitude of differences
204         Yet, these effects were moderated by health behaviors (interaction B=0.19, P=0.04).
205 ng breastfeeding as a potential preventative health behavior is particularly compelling because it is
206 ve contribution of CHC per se versus adverse health behaviors is uncertain.
207 factors on vision and eye health, as well as health behavior, is unknown.
208    As the first known computational model of health behavior, it represents a significant advance in
209 dependent of preinfection chronic health and health behavior, it would suggest that survival differen
210 ood and (ii) socioeconomic conditions, (iii) health behaviors, (iv) social connections, (v) psycholog
211 quately address two key dynamical aspects of health behavior: learning and the effect of immediate so
212 spousal relationship is a known influence on health behavior, little is known about the level of corr
213 iation remained after further adjustment for health behaviors, marital status, and education.
214                        Maintaining life-long health behaviors may be crucial to reduce late-life risk
215  that early interventions to promote certain health behaviors may instill a virtuous cycle with benef
216 cal (i.e. inflammation) and behavioral (i.e. health behaviors) mechanisms.
217 considered to be an important determinant of health behaviors, mediators, and outcomes.
218 aracteristics including comorbid conditions, health behaviors, medication history, site of care, and
219 ed intervention that uses patient education, health behavior modification, and exercise training to i
220 tive measures and 11 assessed the effects on health behaviors, mostly reporting non-significant or po
221 lar health as the simultaneous presence of 4 health behaviors (nonsmoking, body mass index <25 kg/m(2
222                                       For CV health behaviors, nonsmoking was most prevalent (range,
223                      We analyze the malarial health behavior of rural populations by using data from
224                                          The health behaviors of 162 testis cancer survivors were com
225 nd public health researchers to describe the health behaviors of adults in the United States.
226            Our prior work has shown that the health behaviors of head and neck cancer patients are in
227 rk approximations of the prevalence of risky health behaviors of survivors by time since diagnosis an
228                                Understanding health behaviors of survivors is imperative, as many sur
229  involves an ongoing telephone survey of the health behaviors of US adults and was established in 198
230                                    Change in health behavior or disease control.
231                No significant differences in health behaviors or health care utilization were found.
232 t be explained by known demographic factors, health behaviors, or biological factors.
233                 We argue that differences in health, behavior, or impaired economic decisions are bet
234 sociations were independent of demographics, health behaviors, other chronic conditions, and physical
235 ad to bias in estimates of change in certain health behaviors over time, and only selected procedures
236 s requires consideration of other job strain-health behavior (particularly the parallel analyses cond
237 ures should stress the potential of low-risk health behavior patterns rather than of specific risk fa
238 tion of QOL with self-reported demographics, health behaviors, physical impairments, surgeries, comor
239 mitation, global health, pain, and fatigue), health behaviors (practice of mental stress management,
240 -based interventions were nurse-administered health behavior promotion, provider-administered medicat
241 rengthened evidence linking job stressors to health behaviors provided by Fransson et al. may help to
242 ors, and identified the individual, disease, health behavior, psychological, and social predictors of
243 y also investigated five mediating pathways (health behavior, psychosocial, health status, access to
244 hod in which health center staff incorporate health behavior questions into routine vaccination activ
245 cted routine immunization activities without health behavior questions.
246 biomarkers, those with poor concordance with health behavior recommendations had higher mortality com
247 r risk factors, appeared to impact patients' health behaviors, regardless of the level of SNP risk.
248 ng immunization visits workers asked about 4 health behaviors related to bed net use, fever, respirat
249 d mental health problems are associated with health behaviors related to combatting EVD.
250 ess, depression, melanoma-related knowledge, health behaviors, satisfaction with melanoma care, unmet
251                               Caregiver oral health behavior scores improved more rapidly in the INT
252    Factors related to engagement in prenatal health behaviors should be addressed in the design of ta
253                       Time trends related to health behaviors show a substantial reduction in smoking
254 rall cardiovascular health with the use of 4 health behavior (smoking, diet, physical activity, body
255 ical diagnoses (cancer and hypertension) and health behaviors (smoking) are far less important than m
256 n was conducted to examine the prevalence of health behaviors (smoking, alcohol use, physical activit
257 uate the interaction between stress and poor health behaviors (smoking, alcohol use, poor diet, and o
258  cardiovascular risk factors, including core health behaviors (smoking, physical activity, diet, and
259 mortality can be traced back to four adverse health behaviors (smoking, poor diet, elevated body mass
260 entation science, primary care, pulmonology, health behavior, smoking cessation, epidemiology, and di
261                         After adjustment for health behaviors, socioeconomic status, body mass index,
262      Our findings point to the importance of health behavior spread in predicting and controlling dis
263 usceptible communities that arise during the health behavior spreading process, which in turn depends
264 entical conditions, the process by which the health behavior spreads has a very strong effect on dise
265 conomic factors, emotional factors, parental health behaviors, stressful events, self-regulation of t
266 conomic factors, emotional factors, parental health behaviors, stressful events, self-regulation of t
267 me, health, cognitive and physical function, health behaviors, subjective beliefs about longevity, th
268 s but also genetic variations and individual health behaviors such as diet, physical activity, sleep,
269 ort-term effects to long-term cancer-related health behaviors such as repeat screening.
270  quartile were significantly correlated with health behaviors such as smoking (r = -0.69, P < .001),
271                             We conclude that health behaviors such as smoking may have increased the
272     Here, we build on mounting evidence that health behaviors - such as vaccination, and refusal ther
273            New methods are needed to improve health behaviors, such as adherence to colorectal cancer
274 nization task teams, as well as promotion of health behaviors, such as clean-water use and good hygie
275 a sensitive period for weight gain and risky health behaviors, such as smoking.
276                                              Health behavior takes place within social contexts.
277 s mental illness), and engaged in more risky health behaviors than adults without either condition.
278 nt of population-level agent-based models of health behavior that aim to incorporate psychological th
279 s suggest a longer-term shift in dietary and health behavior that is independent of adverse economic
280  treatment should be expanded to address the health behaviors that contribute to obesity and chronic
281 earch has been on objective social roles and health behavior, the brain is the key organ for forming,
282 nd ultimately motivating positive changes in health behaviors, the American Heart Association convene
283 oned action approach, although ubiquitous in health behavior theory (e.g., Theory of Reasoned Action/
284 cture on diffusion by studying the spread of health behavior through artificially structured online c
285 y analyses revealed a discrete break for all health behaviors timed with policy discussion and implem
286 , childhood and adulthood circumstances, and health behaviors, to determine the relative contribution
287 etween districts the change over 1 year in 4 health behaviors: use of insecticide-treated nets, appro
288 rocessing tool previously used in studies of health behaviors using social media.
289 l picture regarding testis cancer survivors' health behaviors was mixed compared with the relative an
290  childhood socioeconomic status and negative health behaviors was observed (P<0.001).
291                                        Among health behaviors, we observed mediation through exercise
292 se, socioeconomic status, health status, and health behavior were adjusted.
293                                    When oral health behaviors were analyzed, private SC was associate
294                                              Health behaviors were assessed with the telephone-admini
295                           Several modifiable health behaviors were associated with maintenance of goo
296                                      Studied health behaviors were bednet use, obtaining care for fev
297 nvironmental influences on education and the health behaviors were substantial among the well-educate
298 tween the 2 districts in the change in the 4 health behaviors when controlling for age, sex, maternal
299 ain and sleep, and the promotion of positive health behaviors with the aim of improving physical func
300 pirical data can inform our understanding of health behavior, with a particular focus on understandin

 
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