Associations of marital and parental status and family members living together with health-related behaviors in Japanese young workers : a cross-sectional study

The aim of this study was to clarify the associations of family members living together with healthrelated behaviors in Japanese young workers. The participants were 300 men and women aged 20-39 years in 2015 who had a job. A web-based self-administered questionnaire on status of partnering and pare...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of Medical Investigation 2019/02/15, Vol.66(1.2), pp.141-147
Hauptverfasser: Nakamoto, Mariko, Tanaka, Yukiko, Ono, Satomi, Nakamoto, Akiko, Shuto, Emi, Sakai, Tohru
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container_end_page 147
container_issue 1.2
container_start_page 141
container_title The Journal of Medical Investigation
container_volume 66
creator Nakamoto, Mariko
Tanaka, Yukiko
Ono, Satomi
Nakamoto, Akiko
Shuto, Emi
Sakai, Tohru
description The aim of this study was to clarify the associations of family members living together with healthrelated behaviors in Japanese young workers. The participants were 300 men and women aged 20-39 years in 2015 who had a job. A web-based self-administered questionnaire on status of partnering and parenting, number of family members living together, dietary habits, drinking habit, smoking habit, self-rated health, employment status, working time and commuting time was conducted through Internet. Multiple logistic regression analysis and general linear models were used to assess the association of family members living together with healthrelated behaviors. The multivariate-adjusted odds ratio (95% confidence interval, p-value) for current drinking in unmarried participants living with their parents compared to unmarried participants living alone was 0.35 (0.13-0.93, p=0.036). The adjusted means of frequency of breakfast skipping and frequency of eating out showed a trend for inverse associations with the presence of a partner and children. However, those associations disappeared after adjustment for age of youngest child. The findings suggest that the presence of parents might affect drinking behavior and that age of youngest child living together might affect the frequency of breakfast skipping in young Japanese workers. J. Med. Invest. 66 : 141-147, February, 2019
doi_str_mv 10.2152/jmi.66.141
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subjects Adult
Alcohol Drinking
Cross-Sectional Studies
cross-sectional study
Family
Female
Health Behavior
health-related behaviors
Humans
Male
Marital Status
Middle Aged
parental status
Parents
Smoking
young Japanese worker
title Associations of marital and parental status and family members living together with health-related behaviors in Japanese young workers : a cross-sectional study
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