On ‘Lifestyle’.
A casual read of both the public discussion about health and the peer-reviewed literature might suggest that lifestyle is the central determinant of population health. The word “lifestyle” as a medical subject heading search term in PubMed produces more than 67,000 results, while a “lifestyle and health” Google search yields a suitably mind-boggling half-billion results.
The notion of lifestyle as central to health production goes back more than 50 years, as studies such as Framingham and Alameda County in the US and the MONICA project led by the World Health Organization (WHO) in Europe focused mainly on identifying particular behavioral risk factors (e.g. smoking and physical inactivity) that have a significant effect on mortality and morbidity.
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In 1985, the hallmark Report of the Secretary’s Task Force on Black and Minority Health, also known as the Heckler Report, discussed lifestyle in the context of minority health disparities. Although comprehensive in its focus on cultural and other macro determinants, it also suggested that lifestyle influences homicide (“the high homicide rate can be related to … lifestyle, or individual and group ways of life”), differences among groups (“differences in socioeconomic status, culture, and lifestyle are hypothesized to explain the lower relative mortality of Asian/Pacific Islanders in the United States”), and recommendations for improved health in general (“health education activities should foster the development of lifestyles that maintain and enhance the state of health and well-being”).
The United Nations recently referred to chronic conditions as “lifestyle diseases,” focusing on the modifiable risk factors of smoking, unhealthy diet, and physical inactivity; WHO produced a podcast titled “Do Lifestyle Changes Improve Health?”
There is ample evidence that adverse population health behavior influence the health of those populations. However, I would argue that our indiscriminate use of the world “lifestyle” is perilous and might set our cause—improving the health of populations—further back than we might think.
Why? I offer four reasons.
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Third, lifestyle suggests not only that by changing lifestyle we can make individuals better, but also that we can predict we will do so, if only we can change lifestyles now. Unfortunately, it is well-established that action on individual behavior alone, absent environmental modification, will yield little action against intractable problems such as obesity. We also know that our capacity to predict health in individuals, characterized by any single risk factor, is extraordinarily limited. The “lifestyle” bandwagon suggests the production of complex diseases rests within individuals when in fact it does not, and implies that once we identify the culprit lifestyle we can improve an individual’s health, which we have little confidence we can.
Fourth, the word “lifestyle” is a victim of its own seductiveness, providing a media-friendly hook for popularizing health risks at the expense of harder to synthesize, but more accurate, pictures of disease causation. In a telling illustration, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) published a report called “Potentially Preventable Deaths from the Five Leading Causes of Death—United States, 2008–2010” that did not mention the word “lifestyle,” yet several articles referring to the report called out “lifestyles” in the headline, including those in Time magazine and the American Cancer Society. It is perhaps then a small step away to longevity coach Dan Buettner opening his TED talk, “How to Live to Be 100+,” with a reference to the Danish Twin Study and a statement that 90 percent of a person’s life expectancy is affected by lifestyle. This talk has been viewed 2.5 million times.
In sum, our lifestyle framing stands to be faulty framing with limited utility. An overreliance on the word tips our lens of focus to an individual locus of control—a set of psychological, internal stimuli that lead to the way in which the individual lives. This almost inevitably leads to the stigmatizing of the individual with the poor lifestyle, exonerating us from action on the causes of that same lifestyle that might indeed bring about a longer-term and sustainable population health change. It is probably time we stop talking about “lifestyle.”
I hope everyone has a terrific week. Until next week.
Warm regards,
Sandro
Sandro Galea, MD, DrPH
Dean and Professor, Boston University School of Public Health
Twitter: @sandrogalea
Acknowledgement: I am grateful for the contributions of Laura Sampson and Salma MH Abdalla MBBS, to this Dean’s Note.
Previous Dean’s Notes are archived at: /sph/category/news/deans-notes/