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Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?

Our research investigates the significance of frequent solo consumption of main meals and the association with a holistic wellbeing measure of happiness using data from 39820 Thai Cohort Study members who completed 8-year follow-up in 2013. This nationwide cohort has been under study since 2005 to a...

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Autores principales: Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara, Banwell, Cathy, Takeda, Wakako, Dixon, Jane, Seubsman, Sam-ang, Sleigh, Adrian C
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Canadian Center of Science and Education 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4802060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25946941
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v7n4p270
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author Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
Banwell, Cathy
Takeda, Wakako
Dixon, Jane
Seubsman, Sam-ang
Sleigh, Adrian C
author_facet Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
Banwell, Cathy
Takeda, Wakako
Dixon, Jane
Seubsman, Sam-ang
Sleigh, Adrian C
author_sort Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
collection PubMed
description Our research investigates the significance of frequent solo consumption of main meals and the association with a holistic wellbeing measure of happiness using data from 39820 Thai Cohort Study members who completed 8-year follow-up in 2013. This nationwide cohort has been under study since 2005 to analyse the dynamics and determinants of the health-risk transition from infectious to chronic diseases. Here we analyse data from the 2009 and 2013 follow-ups. Approximately 11% reported eating more than half of the main meals per week alone. Sociodemographic attributes associated with eating alone were being male, older age, unmarried, smaller household, lower income, and urban residence. Dissatisfaction with amount of spare time (ie ‘busyness’) was also linked to eating alone. In the multivariate cross-sectional model, reporting being unhappy was associated with frequent solo eating (Adjusted Odds Ratio – AOR 1.54, 95% Confidence Intervals 1.30-1.83). Stratified by age and sex groups, the effects were strongest among females (AOR 1.90 1.52-2.38). A monotonic relationship linked frequent eating alone and 4-year longitudinal unhappiness. The larger the dose of unhappiness the greater the odds of eating alone – AOR 1.29, 1.31, 1.72 after controlling for potential covariates. Having a meal is not only important for nutritional and health outcomes; it is also a vital part of daily social interaction. Our study provided empirical evidence from a non-Western setting that sharing meals could contribute to increasing happiness.
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spelling pubmed-48020602016-04-21 Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us? Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara Banwell, Cathy Takeda, Wakako Dixon, Jane Seubsman, Sam-ang Sleigh, Adrian C Glob J Health Sci Articles Our research investigates the significance of frequent solo consumption of main meals and the association with a holistic wellbeing measure of happiness using data from 39820 Thai Cohort Study members who completed 8-year follow-up in 2013. This nationwide cohort has been under study since 2005 to analyse the dynamics and determinants of the health-risk transition from infectious to chronic diseases. Here we analyse data from the 2009 and 2013 follow-ups. Approximately 11% reported eating more than half of the main meals per week alone. Sociodemographic attributes associated with eating alone were being male, older age, unmarried, smaller household, lower income, and urban residence. Dissatisfaction with amount of spare time (ie ‘busyness’) was also linked to eating alone. In the multivariate cross-sectional model, reporting being unhappy was associated with frequent solo eating (Adjusted Odds Ratio – AOR 1.54, 95% Confidence Intervals 1.30-1.83). Stratified by age and sex groups, the effects were strongest among females (AOR 1.90 1.52-2.38). A monotonic relationship linked frequent eating alone and 4-year longitudinal unhappiness. The larger the dose of unhappiness the greater the odds of eating alone – AOR 1.29, 1.31, 1.72 after controlling for potential covariates. Having a meal is not only important for nutritional and health outcomes; it is also a vital part of daily social interaction. Our study provided empirical evidence from a non-Western setting that sharing meals could contribute to increasing happiness. Canadian Center of Science and Education 2015-07 2015-01-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4802060/ /pubmed/25946941 http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v7n4p270 Text en Copyright: © Canadian Center of Science and Education http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Articles
Yiengprugsawan, Vasoontara
Banwell, Cathy
Takeda, Wakako
Dixon, Jane
Seubsman, Sam-ang
Sleigh, Adrian C
Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title_full Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title_fullStr Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title_full_unstemmed Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title_short Health, Happiness and Eating Together: What Can a Large Thai Cohort Study Tell Us?
title_sort health, happiness and eating together: what can a large thai cohort study tell us?
topic Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4802060/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25946941
http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/gjhs.v7n4p270
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