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Metabolic health disparities driven by financial stress: Behavioural adaptation or modification?

  • Wan Chin Kuo
  • , Lisa C. Bratzke
  • , Erika W. Hagen
  • , Lauren Hale
  • , Roger L. Brown
  • , Jodi H. Barnet
  • , Paul E. Peppard
  • University of Wisconsin-Madison

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

7 Scopus citations

Abstract

Financial stress has been linked to an increased risk of metabolic syndrome, yet, it remains unclear whether suboptimal sleep duration and physical inactivity are the adaptive responses to financial stress or effect modifiers in the association between financial stress and metabolic syndrome. Hence, this study aims to examine whether physical activity and sleep duration mediate or moderate the bivariate association between financial stress and metabolic syndrome. A prospective secondary analysis was conducted using data from the Wisconsin Sleep Cohort Study (N = 445, mean [SD] age = 64 [7] years). Baseline moderation effect was examined using subgroup analysis with model constraints; prospective mediation model was examined using bias-corrected bootstrap confidence intervals. Results indicate that participants with higher financial stress were less likely to meet physical activity and sleep recommendations. Baseline moderation analysis indicates that meeting current recommendations of sleep duration and physical activity attenuated the association between financial stress and metabolic syndrome. In the prospective mediation analysis, weekly physical activity levels partially mediated the relationship between financial stress and metabolic syndrome, but sleep duration did not mediate this relationship. In conclusion, the joint effect of optimal sleep duration and physical activity disassociates financial stress from the risk of metabolic syndrome. Future interventions addressing metabolic risk might achieve better outcomes if clinicians and researchers factor in the behavioral adaptation of physical inactivity in financially stressed adults (Clinical Trial Registration: NCT00005557).

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)614-626
Number of pages13
JournalStress and Health
Volume39
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2023

Keywords

  • financial stress
  • metabolic syndrome
  • physical activity
  • sleep duration

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