Korean J Fam Med.
2014;35:19-27
http://dx.doi.org/10.4082/kjfm.2014.35.1.19
Health-Promotion and Disease-Prevention
Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
Original
Article
Hwa-Yeon Seong, Eal-Whan Park*, Yoo-Seock Cheong, Eun-Young Choi,
Ki-Sung Kim1, Sang-Wook Seo
Department of Family Medicine, Dankook University College of Medicine; 1Yonsei Family Clinic, Cheonan, Korea
Background: In the 1990s the primary focus of medicine was shifted to disease prevention. Accordingly, it became the
responsibility of primary-care physicians to educate and counsel the general population not only on disease prevention
specifically but health promotion generally as well. Moreover, it was, and is still today, considered important that
physicians provide positive examples of health-promotion behaviors to patients. The purpose of this study was to
investigate physicians health-promotion behaviors and to identify the factors that influence them.
Methods: We conducted a postal and e-mail survey of the 371 members of the Physician Association of Cheonan City
between May 16th and June 25th, 2011. The questionnaire consisted of 18 items, including questions relating to
sociodemographic factors, screening tests for adult diseases and cancer, and health habits.
Results: There were 127 respondents. The gender breakdown was 112 men (88.2%) and 15 women (11.8%), and the mean
age was 47.8 years. Fifty-nine (46.4%) were family physicians or interns, and 68 (53.6%) were surgeons. Twenty-six percent
(26%) were smokers, and 74.8% were drinkers; 53.5% did exercise; 37% had chronic diseases; 44.9% took periodic cancer
screening tests, and 72.4% took periodic screening tests for adult diseases.
Conclusion: It was found that general characteristics and other health-promotion behaviors of physicians do not affect
physicians practice of undergoing periodic health examination.
Keywords: Health Promotion; Physical Examination; Primary Care Physicians
INTRODUCTION
that encourage the improvement of health status, and involves
management of nutrition, control of body weight, exercise,
Beginning in 1990s, the main focus of medicine was shifted
from diagnosis and treatment of disease to disease prevention
and health promotion. Health promotion implies activities
Received: August 31, 2011, Accepted: October 21, 2013
*Corresponding Author: Eal-Whan Park
Tel: +82-41-550-3997, Fax: +82-41-550-7163
E-mail: ewpark@dku.edu
Korean Journal of Family Medicine
Copyright  2014 The Korean Academy of Family Medicine
This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of
the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License
(http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0) which permits
unrestricted noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction in
any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Korean J Fam Med
smoking cessation, moderation of drinking habits, good sleep
habits, and stress management.1) In Korea, Law for the Promotion
of National Health was passed in 1995, the Management Center
for Health Promotion was established in 1998, and since 2011,
the Korean Health Promotion Foundation which oversees respective regional community health centers, has been active.2)
In this context, a consensus on the importance and effectiveness of periodic health examination for early detection or
prevention of disease has emerged. The first periodic health
examination was the Canadian Task Force on Periodic Health
Examination3) in 1976. In 1988, the Department of Family
Medicine at Seoul National University Hospital in Korea
held the symposium, Clinical application of periodic health
exam program for Korean people. Thereafter, periodic health
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
| 19
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
examination programs began at the general hospitals in Seoul and
4)
was defined as a periodic screening test for disease prevention.
the general capital area. In 2011, a national health examination
Included under this rubric were National Health Insurance
program was instituted, along with a variety of health examination
Service examinations as well as examinations taken in private
programs at private hospitals and clinics. Primary-care physicians,
hospitals and clinics. The items on the periodic health exami-
should assume the central role in health-promotion and periodic
nation checklists were based on National Health Insurance
health examination programs in counseling patients on matters
Ser vice screening tests for the five major cancers (i.e., gastric
relevant to the maintenance of healthy lives.5,6) Regarding the
cancer, colon cancer, breast cancer, hepatocellular cancer, cervical
building of the doctor-patient rapport that is so integral to
cancer)12) along with total cholesterol, fasting blood glucose,
effective health counseling, it is certain that the physicians health-
liver function, and urinalysis tests. The screening tests for the
6)
7)
promotion behaviors have a great effect. Wells study showed
five major cancers are esophagoduodenoscopy, colonoscopy,
definitively that such behaviors have a positive effect on patient
mammography, abdominal ultrasonography, and Papanicolaou
counseling and education. Indeed, they seem to be an indicator
smear, respectively.
of the level of health-related education and awareness within a
8,9)
community.
The contents of the questionnaire included five questions
relating to perspectives on and the practice of periodic health
Over the past 30 years or more, many studies on health-
examination, five questions on smoking habits, alcohol consump-
promotion behaviors have been published, though most of
tion, exercise, sleep habits, and coffee or soda consumption,
them focused on the general population or specific age groups.
and nine questions on sociodemographic characteristics. The
10)
11)
More pertinently, Park et al. and Oh et al. studied physicians
questions were as follows: 1) Do you think that periodic health
health-promotion behaviors; however, more than 20 years
examination is needed?, 2) Where do you take your periodic
have passed since their findings were reported. Moreover, they
health examination (for example: National Health Insurance
did not examine physician populations specifically, but rather
Service, hospital, or private clinic)?, 3) How often do you take
compared resident physicians or university hospital faculty with
the five major cancer screening tests?, 4) Do you take periodic
the general population. Therefore, in this study we surveyed the
tests of total cholesterol, fasting blood glucose, liver function, and
status of health-promotion and disease-prevention behaviors
urinalysis?, 5) Do you take vitamins or dietary supplements?,
as well as other health-related behaviors of practicing primary-
6) How often do you physically exercise longer than 30 minutes
care physicians, and assessed the factors affecting their taking of
per day?, 7) How many hours do you sleep per day?, 8) Do you
periodic health examinations.
smoke? (If you smoke, how many cigarettes do you smoke?, Have
you ever quit smoking before, and which method did you use?),
METHODS
9) Do you drink alcohol?, How often?, How much per day?, 10)
Do you drink coffee or other beverages?, How much?, 11) What
are your sociodemographic characteristics (gender, age, height,
1. Research Subjects
The 371 members of the Physician Association of Cheonan
weight, marriage status, disease status, work type, number of
patients seen per day, and specialty)?
City were posted or e-mailed a questionnaire between May
Specialties were classified into three groups: family medicine,
16th and June 25th. We also directly called physicians in an
internal medicine, and surgery. The internal medicine group
attempt to encourage or confirm their participation. A total of
included internal medicine, pediatrics, dermatology, rehabilitative
138 physicians, or just over 37%, replied to the questionnaire or
medicine, and radiology. The surgery group included general
survey. We excluded one questionnaire completed by a physician
surgery, orthopedics, neurosurgery, otolaryngology, plastic sur-
who did not practice the required specialty, along with another
gery, chest surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, and anesthesiology.
10 questionnaires that were only partially completed. Thus, we
For statistical analysis purposes, the family medicine group was
analyzed 127 questionnaires.
combined with the internal medicine group.
For the purposes of our study, periodic health examination
20 |
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
The respondents regularly undergoing the five major cancer
Korean J Fam Med
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
screening tests were defined as the regular cancer screening
among health-risk factors, sociodemographic characteristics, and
group, and those not regularly undergoing them were defined as
examination practices. The statistical analysis was performed
the irregular cancer screening group. We analyzed the differences
using PASW SPSS ver. 18.0 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA).
between the two groups according to the factors that can affect
periodic test-taking. Likewise, the group of respondents regularly
undergoing adult disease screening tests were defined as the
RESULTS
regular adult disease screening group, and those not regularly
screening group. We also analyzed the differences between these
1. Sociodemographic Characteristics of Research
Subjects
two groups according to the factors that can affect periodic testing.
A total of 127 physicians replied to the questionnaires, 112
These factors include gender, age, physicians specialty, number
males (88.2%) and 15 females (11.8%). The most common age
of patients seen per day, smoking habit, alcohol consumption, use
group, representing 60 individuals (47.2%), was the 40s, and
of dietary supplements, coffee or other-beverage consumption,
the mean age was 47.8  8.3 years. Among the 127 respondents,
exercise, sleep habits, and disease status.
121 (95.3%) were married, and six were unmarried. According
undergoing them were defined as the irregular adult disease
to the work type, there were 14 employed physicians (11%),
2. Statistical Analysis
83 sole-practice physicians (65.4%), and 30 group-practice
The chi-square and Fischers exact tests were conducted to
physicians (23.6%). As for specialty, family medicine accounted
analyze the correlations between perspectives on periodic health
for 13 physicians (10.2%), internal medicine for 46 (36.2%),
examination and examination practice. The chi-square and
and surgery for 68 (53.5%). With regard to the number of
Fischers exact tests were utilized also to analyze the correlations
patients seen per day, less than 60 was the most common group,
Table 1. General characteristics of subject physicians
Variable
Age (y)
Marriage
Group of internal medicine* (n = 59)
Group of surgery (n = 68)
Total (n = 127)
3039
11 (18.6)
11 (16.2)
22 (17.3)
4049
27 (45.8)
33 (48.5)
60 (47.2)
5059
15 (25.4)
15 (22.1)
30 (23.6)
6069
5 (8.5)
9 (13.2)
14 (11.0)
70
1 (1.7)
0 (0)
Classification
Married
56 (94.9)
65 (95.6)
121 (95.3)
3 (5.1)
3 (4.4)
6 (4.7)
Solo practice
41 (69.5)
42 (61.8)
83 (65.4)
Group practice
13 (22.0)
17 (25.0)
30 (23.6)
5 (8.5)
9 (13.2)
14 (11.0)
<60
22 (37.3)
31 (45.6)
53 (41.7)
6079
12 (20.3)
15 (22.1)
27 (21.3)
8099
14 (23.7)
12 (17.6)
26 (20.5)
100
11 (18.6)
10 (14.7)
21 (16.5)
Single
Working type
Employed
No. of patients seen per day
1 (0.8)
Values are presented as number (%).
*It included family medicines, internal medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, dermatology, rehabilitation medicine, radiology, and so
on. It included surgery, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, urology, ophthalmology, plastic surgery, thoracic surgery, obstetrics and
gynecology, anesthesiology, otolaryngology, and so on.
Korean J Fam Med
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
| 21
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
numbering 53 (41.7%) (Table 1).
60 (47.2%) had two drinks to less than a bottle (ethanol, 6.2 to
The mean height of the subject physicians was 169  7.3 cm,
28.1 g), and 25 (27.5%) drank a bottle or more. By specialty, 39
the mean weight was 70.1  10.9 kg, and the mean body mass
(66.1%) of the 59 family physicians or internists drank alcohol,
index (BMI) was 24.4  2.7 kg/m . The number of obese subjects
whereas 56 (82.4%) of the 68 surgeons did so. The family
(i.e., BMI more than 25 kg/m ) was 47 (37%). The subjects
physicians or internists had significantly lower smoking and
with diagnosed diseases numbered 47 (37%): hypertension,
drinking rates than the surgeons (P < 0.05) (Table 2).
22 (44%); hepatitis, 5 (10%); dyslipidemia, 5 (10%); diabetes
mellitus, 4 (8%), heart disease, 3 (6%); cancer, 1 (2%); thyroid
2) Dietary supplements
disease, 1 (2%); ureteral stone/pancreatic disease/liver
Sixty-nine (54.3%) of the 127 physicians took dietary supple-
transplantation, 9 (18%) (Figure 1). Three physicians had two or
ments: 51 (45.1%) took multivitamins, 19 (16.8%) omega-3, 18
more diseases.
(15.9%) vitamin C, and 17 (15%) red ginseng. One hundred and
five (82.7%) physicians drank coffee or soda: 80 (63%) drank
2. Health-related Behaviors of Research Subjects
two or fewer glasses per day, 23 (18.1%) three to six glasses per
day, and two (1.6%) seven or more glasses per day. There were
1) Smoking, alcohol consumption
no dietary supplement differences according to specialty, though
The distribution for smoking habit was as follows: smoker,
surgeons drank significantly more coffee or soda than the family
33 (26%); former smoker, 48 (37.8%); non-smoker, 46 (36.2%).
physicians or internists (P < 0.05) (Table 2).
Twenty-eight (84.8%) of the 33 smokers tried to quit; the
methods used were nicotine patch (9), electronic cigarettes (9),
3) Exercise and sleep hours
medication such as Champix (7), herbal cigarettes (5), and other
One hundred and nineteen (93.7%) of the physicians
including just quit, no special aids (14). The mean smoking
exercised regularly more than once per week: 71 (48.3%) walked,
quantity was 19.7  12.5 per day. Among the 59 family physicians
hiked or jogged, 40 (27.2%) played golf, 15 (10.2%) exercised
or internists, there were eight smokers (13.6%) and 26 former
at fitness centers, 10 (6.8%) swam, and 10 (6.8%) exercised in
smokers (44.1); among the 68 surgeons, there were 25 smokers
other ways. Eight (6.3%) of the physicians were non-exercisers.
(36.8%) and 22 former smokers (32.4%).
Eighty-three (65.4%) of the physicians slept five to seven hours,
Alcohol consumers numbered 95 (74.8%), 42 of whom
41 (32.3%) seven to nine hours, and three (2.4%) less than five
(44.2%) drank less than twice per week, and 11 (11.6%) drank
hours. There were no differences in exercise habits or sleep hours
more than four times per week. As for quantities per session,
according to specialty (Table 2).
3. Screening-Test Practices
One hundred and twenty-three (96.9%) of the physicians
replied positively to the question of the necessity of periodic
health examinations. Fifty-seven (44.9%) regularly underwent
the five major cancer screening tests: 29 (50.9%) had them
performed biennially, 15 (26.3%) annually, and 13 (22.8%)
every three years (Table 3). Seventy (55.1%) of the physicians,
meanwhile, had the tests performed irregularly, which seems
a low rate in light of the physicians acknowledgement of the
importance and high priority of such testing.
Ninety-two (72.4%) of the physicians regularly had adult
disease screening tests performed (total cholesterol, fasting
Figure 1. Proportion of diagnosed diseases of subject.
22 |
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
plasma glucose, liver function, urinalysis): 53 (57.6%) annually,
Korean J Fam Med
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
Table 2. Smoking, alcohol, and eating dietary supplements of subject physicians
Specialty
Group of internal medicine* (n = 59)
Group of surgery (n = 68)
Total (n = 127)
Gender
Male
Female
0.986
52 (88.1)
60 (88.2)
112 (88.2)
7 (11.9)
8 (11.8)
15 (11.8)
<0.05
Smoking
Smokers
P-value
8 (13.6)
25 (36.8)
33 (26.0)
X-smokers
26 (44.1)
22 (32.4)
48 (37.8)
Nonsmokers
25 (42.4)
21 (30.9)
46 (36.2)
<0.05
Alcohol
Drinkers
39 (66.1)
56 (82.4)
95 (74.8)
Nondrinkers
20 (33.9)
12 (17.6)
32 (25.2)
Dietary supplements
0.487
Yes
34 (57.6)
35 (51.5)
69 (54.3)
No
25 (42.4)
33 (48.5)
58 (45.7)
<0.05
Coffee and beverages
Yes
44 (74.6)
61 (89.7)
105 (82.7)
No
15 (25.4)
7 (10.3)
22 (17.3)
<1
4 (6.8)
4 (5.9)
8 (6.3)
55 (93.2)
64 (94.1)
119 (93.7)
<5
2 (3.4)
1 (1.5)
3 (2.4)
57
37 (62.7)
46 (67.6)
83 (65.4)
79
20 (33.9)
21 (30.9)
41 (32.3)
Exercise (time/wk)
0.07
Sleep (h)
0.71
Values are presented as number (%).
*It included family medicines, internal medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, dermatology, rehabilitation medicine, radiology, and so
on. It included surgery, orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, urology, ophthalmology, plastic surgery, thoracic surgery, obstetrics and
gynecology, anesthesiology, otolaryngology, and so on. By chi-square test.
21 (22.8%) biennially, 15 (16.3%) biannually, and 3 (3.3%) every
4. Factors Affecting Periodic Health Examination
three years. As for the health examination type, the survey results
were as follows: selective self-examination, 53 (41.7%); National
1) Five major cancer screening tests
Health Insurance Service, 28 (22%); hospital health examination
The results of Fishers exact and chi-square tests analyzing
program, 19 (15%) (Table 3). With respect to the acknowledged
the correlations with factors affecting the cancer screening
need for periodic health examination, there was a significant
examination behaviors of the two groups revealed that regular
correlation with regular adult disease screening (P < 0.05), but no
exercisers underwent more screening examinations than non-
correlation with five major cancer screenings.
exercisers (P < 0.05). Further, there was no correlation between
screening-test regularity and age, gender, specialty, number of
patients seen per day, smoking, alcohol consumption, dietary
Korean J Fam Med
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
| 23
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
Table 3. Time interval and sites of taking health screening tests
Variable
Screening for
cancers
(n = 57)
Screening for
adult diseases
(n = 92)
Male
Every year
15 (26.3)
53 (57.6)
Every 2 years
29 (50.9)
21 (22.8)
13 (22.8)
Every 6 months
3 (3.3)
15 (16.3)
Site of taking screening tests
Self screening
53 (41.7)
National health promotion
programs
28 (22)
General hospital
Variable
Responders
(%)* (n = 57)
Nonresponders P-value||
(%) (n = 70)
Gender
Interval of taking screening tests
More than 2 years
Table 4. Variable factors that influence on periodic cancer screening
19 (15)
Values are presented as number (%).
supplements, coffee or soda consumption, sleep hours, or disease
status (Table 4).
2) Adult disease screening tests
The results of Fishers exact and chi-square tests analyzing
the correlations with factors affecting the adult disease screening
0.338
52 (91.2)
60 (85.7)
5 (8.8)
10 (14.3)
3039
3 (5.3)
19 (27.1)
4049
29 (50.9)
31 (44.3)
5059
15 (26.3)
15 (21.4)
6069
10 (17.5)
Female
Age (y)
70
<0.05
0 (0)
4 (5.7)
1 (1.4)
Specialty
0.109
Group of internal medicine
22 (38.6)
37 (52.9)
Group of surgery
35 (61.4)
33 (47.1)
<60
21 (36.8)
32 (45.7)
6079
13 (22.8)
14 (20.0)
8099
14 (24.6)
12 (17.1)
100
9 (15.8)
12 (17.1)
16 (28.1)
30 (42.9)
No. of patients seen per day
0.662
Smoking
Non-smoker
0.131
X-smoker
22 (38.6)
26 (37.1)
Smoker
19 (33.3)
14 (20.0)
Drinker
47 (82.5)
48 (68.6)
Non-drinker
10 (17.5)
22 (31.4)
Alcohol
0.073
Dietary supplements
0.072
examination behaviors of the two groups showed no correlation
Yes
36 (63.2)
33 (47.1)
between screening-test regularity and age, gender, specialty,
No
21 (36.8)
37 (29.1)
Yes
47 (37.0)
58 (45.7)
No
10 (7.9)
12 (52.9)
number of patients seen per day, smoking, alcohol consumption,
dietary supplements, coffee or soda consumption, exercise, sleep
hours, or disease status (Table 5).
DISCUSSION
In this study we investigated the health-promotion and
Coffee and other beverages
0.953
Exercise (time/wk)
<0.05
<1
6 (10.5)
20 (28.6)
51 (89.5)
50 (71.4)
<5
1 (1.8)
2 (2.9)
57
35 (61.4)
48 (68.6)
79
21 (36.8)
20 (28.6)
Sleep (h)
0.624
Disease
0.738
disease-prevention behaviors of primary-care physicians and
Yes
22 (38.6)
25 (35.7)
analyzed the factors affecting how often they received periodic
No
35 (61.4)
45 (64.3)
health examinations. With the recent improvement in Korean
national socioeconomic status, public interest in health has
grown. The most important goal of health-promotion efforts
is the modification of overall life style and of specific behaviors
that are considered to be causative factors in disease occurrence
and progression.13) Physicians have a dual role in this regard, in
that they are in a strong position to set good examples of health-
24 |
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
*Responders: participants who performed regular periodic health
screening test. Non-responders: participants who didnt performed
regular periodic health screening test. It included family medicines,
internal medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, dermatology,
rehabilitation medicine, radiology, and so on. It included surgery,
orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, urology, ophthalmology, plastic
surgery, thoracic surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, anesthesiology,
otolaryngology, and so on. ||From Fishers exact test and chi-square
test between 2 groups.
Korean J Fam Med
Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
Table 5. Variable factors that influence on implementation of perio-
promotion behaviors and also are counselors and teachers of their
dic screening tests for adult diseases
patients in health-related matters.5) If physicians themselves do
NonResponders
responders P-value||
(%)* (n = 92)
(%) (n = 35)
Variable
Gender
0.251
not set those good examples, their relationships with patients will
suffer, and the interests of community-wide health promotion
will fail to be served.
83 (90.2)
29 (82.9)
In the present survey results, the smoking rate among the
9 (9.8)
6 (17.1)
127 subject physicians was 26%, which is comparable to the
3039
9 (9.8)
13 (37.1)
4049
45 (48.9)
15 (42.9)
Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (KNHANES) of
5059
25 (27.2)
5 (14.3)
2009.14) The rate of alcohol consumption was 74.8%, higher
6069
12 (13.0)
2 (5.7)
Male
Female
Age (y)
<0.05
70
Specialty
1 (1.1)
than the 60.6% of the general population 19 or older as reported
0 (0)
0.768
Group of internal medicine
42 (45.7)
17 (48.6)
Group of surgery
50 (54.3)
18 (51.4)
No. of patients seen per day
27% reported for the general population by the Korean National
in KNHANES. However, a confounding factor was the predominance of males among the subject physicians; indeed, that
0.346
rate was lower than the KNHANES-reported 88% rate of alcohol
<60
37 (40.2)
16 (45.7)
consumption among males 19 or older in the general population.
6079
20 (21.7)
7 (20.0)
A total of 53.5% of the subject physicians engaged in regular
8099
19 (20.7)
7 (20.0)
16 (17.4)
5 (14.3)
exercise three times per week. They exercised aerobically, for
100
Smoking
0.840
example by walking, hiking, or jogging (48.3%), or they played
Non-smoker
32 (34.8)
14 (40.0)
golf (27.2%). The mean BMI of the subject physicians was 24.38
X-smoker
36 (39.1)
12 (34.3)
kg/m2. The prevalence of obesity, defined as a BMI higher than
Smoker
24 (26.1)
9 (25.7)
Alcohol
0.073
Drinker
71 (77.2)
24 (68.6)
Non-drinker
21 (22.8)
11 (31.4)
Dietary supplements
34.2% rate reported for those 30 years or older by KNHANES.
Among the subject physicians, five (3.9%) had a BMI higher than
0.229
Yes
53 (57.6)
16 (45.7)
No
39 (42.4)
19 (54.3)
Yes
76 (82.6)
29 (82.9)
No
16 (17.4)
6 (17.1)
Coffee and other beverages
17 (18.5)
9 (25.7)
1
Sleep (h)
75 (81.5)
26 (74.3)
<5
2 (2.2)
1 (2.9)
57
61 (66.3)
22 (62.9)
79
29 (31.5)
12 (34.3)
37 (40.2)
10 (28.6)
No
55 (59.8)
25 (71.4)
groups.
major cancer screening tests was 44.1%, which was very similar
*Responders: participants who performed regular periodic health
screening test. Non-responders: participants who didnt performed
regular periodic health screening test. It included family medicines,
internal medicine, pediatrics, psychiatry, neurology, dermatology,
rehabilitation medicine, radiology, and so on. It included surgery,
orthopedic surgery, neurosurgery, urology, ophthalmology, plastic
surgery, thoracic surgery, obstetrics and gynecology, anesthesiology,
otorhinolaryngology, and so on. ||From Fishers exact test and chisquare test between 2 groups.
Korean J Fam Med
considered to be due to the mean-age difference between the two
The proportion of subject physicians regularly taking the five
0.225
Yes
corresponding KNHANES numbers for those 30 years or older:
28.5%, 9.8%, and 13.8%, respectively. The discrepancy here was
0.926
Disease
diabetes mellitus and dyslipidemia was 17.3%, 3.1%, and
3.9%, respectively, which were markedly lower rates than the
0.367
<1
30 kg/m2, which is the American obesity criterion.15)
Among the subject physicians, the prevalence of hypertension,
0.974
Exercise (time/wk)
25 kg/m2, was 37% (47 physicians) which was higher than the
to the 44.3% of those 19 years or older reported by KNHANES.
The proportion taking regular adult disease screening tests
meanwhile was 72.4%, which was considerably higher than the
KNHANES-reported 51.8% of the general population aged 19
years or older.
In the report by Park et al.,10) there was little difference in
smoking rates between physicians in practice (26%) and resident
physicians (21.7%). The rate of alcohol consumption among
physicians in practice (74.8%), however, was higher than that
Vol. 35, No. 1 Jan 2014
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Hwa-Yeon Seong, et al: Health-Promotion Behaviors of Primary-Care Practitioners
among resident physicians (30.5%). The rate of exercising less
CONFLICT OF INTEREST
than one time per week among physicians in practice (20.5%)
was lower than that among resident physicians (88.4%).
It was found that most physicians in practice (96.9%) were
No potential conflict of interest relevant to this article was
reported.
aware that periodic health examination is necessary; even so, the
rate of regularly taking the five major cancer screening tests was
only 44.9%, and the rate of regularly taking adult disease screening
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