Aspects of medicine focused on food, exercise, and sleep
"Lifestyle modification" and "Lifestyle intervention" redirect here. For other behavioral interventions, see
Intervention (counseling) .
Lifestyle Medicine The focus of Lifestyle Medicine is on these 6 pillars.
Focus nutrition, sleep, physical activity, stress management, tobacco/alcohol cessation, and healthy relationships.. Significant diseases Specialist Lifestyle medicine physician
Lifestyle medicine (LM) is a branch of medicine focused on preventive healthcare and self-care dealing with prevention, research, education, and treatment of disorders caused by lifestyle factors and preventable causes of death such as nutrition , physical inactivity , chronic stress , and self-destructive behaviors including the consumption of tobacco products and drug or alcohol abuse .[ 1] The goal of LM is to improve individuals' health and wellbeing by applying the 6 pillars of lifestyle medicine (nutrition, regular physical activity , restorative sleep , stress management, avoidance of risky substances , and positive social connection) to prevent chronic conditions such as cardiovascular diseases , diabetes , metabolic syndrome and obesity .[ 1] [ 2]
Lifestyle medicine focuses on educating and motivating patients to improve the quality of their lives by changing personal habits and behaviors around the use of healthier diets which minimize ultra-processed foods such as a Mediterranean diet or whole food, plant-predominant dietary patterns. Poor lifestyle choices like dietary patterns, physical inactivity, tobacco use , alcohol addiction and dependence , drug addiction and dependence , as well as psychosocial factors, e.g. chronic stress and lack of social support and community, contribute to chronic disease .[ 1] [ 3] In the clinic, major barriers to lifestyle counseling are that physicians feel ill-prepared and are skeptical about their patients' receptivity.[ 4] However, by encouraging healthy decisions, illnesses can be prevented or better managed in the long-term.
^ a b c Mechanick, Jeffrey I.; Kushner, Robert F., eds. (2016). "The Importance of Healthy Living and Defining Lifestyle Medicine" . Lifestyle Medicine: A Manual for Clinical Practice . Cham, Switzerland : Springer Nature . pp. 9–15. doi :10.1007/978-3-319-24687-1 . ISBN 978-3-319-24685-7 . S2CID 29205050 .
^ Lifestyle Medicine . Wiley. doi :10.1002/(issn)2688-3740 .
^ Kvaavik, Elisabeth (April 2010). "Influence of Individual and Combined Health Behaviors on Total and Cause-Specific Mortality in Men and Women: The United Kingdom Health and Lifestyle Survey" . JAMA Internal Medicine . 170 (8): 711–8. doi :10.1001/archinternmed.2010.76 . hdl :10536/DRO/DU:30131641 . PMID 20421558 . Retrieved 7 July 2015 .
^ Hivert, Marie-France; Arena, Ross; Forman, Daniel E.; Kris-Etherton, Penny M.; McBride, Patrick E.; Pate, Russell R.; Spring, Bonnie; Trilk, Jennifer; Horn, Linda V. Van; Kraus, William E.; Health, On behalf of the American Heart Association Physical Activity Committee of the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic; the Behavior Change Committee, a joint committee of the Council on Lifestyle and Cardiometabolic Health and the Council on Epidemiology and Prevention; the Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation; Nursing, and the Council on Cardiovascular and Stroke (1 January 2016). "Medical Training to Achieve Competency in Lifestyle Counseling: An Essential Foundation for Prevention and Treatment of Cardiovascular Diseases and Other Chronic Medical Conditions: A Scientific Statement From the American Heart Association" . Circulation . 134 (15): e308–e327. doi :10.1161/CIR.0000000000000442 . ISSN 0009-7322 . PMID 27601568 . S2CID 7847964 .