Investigating the health profiles of Hong Kong Chinese: results of a cluster analysis.

AIM The aim of this study was to identify the health profile of a group of Hong Kong Chinese adults. BACKGROUND People were on the alert about their current health status and health has become the most valuable asset to many Hong Kong people. METHODS A descriptive correlational survey was conducted during the period December 2003 - September 2004 in six districts in Hong Kong; 702 Chinese adults aged 18-64 completed a structured questionnaire. RESULTS Cluster analysis revealed two profiles groups on their attitude towards social health, sexual behaviour, mental health, diet/nutrition, smoking/substance use, health knowledge and physical activity. CONCLUSIONS Health data describing the health status of adults can be structured into a profile reflecting the characteristics of the target population under study. The findings showed that subjects in both clusters face two serious health issues: engage in little physical activity and possess poor knowledge about health. This finding does suggest that nurses can apply our understanding of these health profiles and to develop interventions that improve their health. RELEVANCE TO CLINICAL PRACTICE This finding does suggest that nurses can apply our understanding of these health profiles and to develop interventions that improve their health.

[1]  S. Galea,et al.  Distribution of education and population health: an ecological analysis of New York City neighborhoods. , 2005, American journal of public health.

[2]  Sonny H. M. Tse,et al.  Attitudes and skills of Hong Kong Chinese medicine practitioners towards computerization in practice: A cluster analysis , 2005, Medical informatics and the Internet in medicine.

[3]  P. Gillett,et al.  Stages of change for physical activity among family caregivers. , 2005, Journal of advanced nursing.

[4]  E. Dowdell,et al.  Health risk behavior assessment: nutrition, weight, and tobacco use in one urban seventh-grade class. , 2004, Public health nursing.

[5]  M. Day,et al.  A pilot study on nurses' attitudes toward perinatal bereavement support: a cluster analysis , 2004, Nurse Education Today.

[6]  Judith C Hays,et al.  Living arrangements and health status in later life: a review of recent literature. , 2002, Public health nursing.

[7]  P. Ackerman,et al.  Current-events knowledge in adults: an investigation of age, intelligence, and nonability determinants. , 2001, Psychology and aging.

[8]  H. Hsu,et al.  The relationships between health beliefs and utilization of free health examinations in older people living in a community setting in Taiwan. , 2001, Journal of advanced nursing.

[9]  Benjamin H. Gottlieb,et al.  Social support measurement and intervention: A guide for health and social scientists. , 2000 .

[10]  J. Stessman,et al.  The Effects of Physical Activity on Mortality in the Jerusalem 70‐Year‐Olds Longitudinal Study , 2000, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[11]  P. Ackerman,et al.  Domain-specific knowledge as the "dark matter" of adult intelligence: Gf/Gc, personality and interest correlates. , 2000, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[12]  H. Fulford,et al.  Health visitor-run adult sleep clinics. , 1999, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[13]  L. Waite,et al.  At risk on the cusp of old age: living arrangements and functional status among black, white and Hispanic adults. , 1999, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[14]  Y. Shin,et al.  The effects of a walking exercise program on physical function and emotional state of elderly Korean women. , 1999, Public health nursing.

[15]  J. Winney Constipation. , 1998, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).

[16]  J. Dungan,et al.  Health maintenance for the independent frail older adult: can it improve physical and mental well-being? , 1996, Journal of advanced nursing.

[17]  L. Melton,et al.  Mortality following inpatient addictions treatment. Role of tobacco use in a community-based cohort. , 1996, JAMA.

[18]  M. Shike Body weight and colon cancer. , 1996, The American journal of clinical nutrition.

[19]  C. Caspersen,et al.  A survey for assessing physical activity among older adults. , 1993, Medicine and science in sports and exercise.

[20]  T. Sellers,et al.  Dietary fat and postmenopausal breast cancer. , 1992, Journal of the National Cancer Institute.

[21]  J. Wilson‐Barnett,et al.  Health education in nursing: perceptions of practice in acute settings. , 1992, Journal of advanced nursing.

[22]  P. Gillies,et al.  The reliability of self-reported sexual behaviour. , 1991, AIDS.

[23]  F. Gehlen Toward a revised theory of hysterical contagion. , 1977, Journal of health and social behavior.

[24]  A. Bohadana,et al.  Gender differences in quit rates following smoking cessation with combination nicotine therapy: influence of baseline smoking behavior. , 2003, Nicotine & tobacco research : official journal of the Society for Research on Nicotine and Tobacco.

[25]  Hila J. Spear,et al.  Adolescent health behaviors and related factors: a review. , 2001, Public health nursing.

[26]  R. Jessor,et al.  Adolescent health behavior and conventionality-unconventionality: an extension of problem-behavior theory. , 1991, Health psychology : official journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association.

[27]  M. Gott,et al.  The role of the nurse in health promotion , 1990 .

[28]  C. Newell-Withrow Identifying health-seeking behaviors: a study of adolescents. , 1986, Adolescence.

[29]  A. O'Leary,et al.  Self-efficacy and health. , 1985, Behaviour research and therapy.