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Mayo Clinic National Health Check-Up Reveals Americans' Health Attitudes

The Mayo Clinic recently conducted a national survey as part of its first-ever Mayo Clinic National Health Check-Up.

"The Mayo Clinic National Health Check-Up takes a pulse on Americans' health opinions and behaviors, from barriers to getting healthy to perceptions of aging, to help identify opportunities to educate and empower people to improve their health," says John T. Wald, MD, medical director for public affairs at Mayo Clinic. "In this first survey, we're also looking at 'health by the decades' to uncover differences as we age."

'Eat a Healthier Diet' Tops Resolutions for 2016
When asked about their plans to improve their health in 2016, survey respondents' top three answers in rank order were "Eat a Healthier Diet" (74%), "Exercise More" (73%), and "Schedule an Annual Wellness Visit with Your Doctor" (66%).

Women were more likely than men to say that they will do something to improve their health in 2016, as seen in the following statistics:
• Eat a more healthful diet (80% vs 67%);
• Schedule an annual wellness visit with their doctor (70% vs 62%);
• Get more sleep (67% vs 58%);
• See their doctor to discuss symptoms they have been experiencing (62% vs 51%);
• Take a nutritional supplement (63% vs 47%); and
• Schedule a milestone screening (56% vs 26%).

"While we know that women tend to be more proactive about their health, it's concerning that so many fewer men say that they plan to schedule a milestone screening, such as a colonoscopy, in 2016," Wald says. "Men need to prioritize screenings as well because early detection of disease can help improve chances of survival. If they are of average risk, men should begin getting screened for colorectal and prostate cancer at age 50, and sooner if they are of above-average risk."

People in 30s Least Optimistic About Aging Better than Parents
While most respondents (70%) said that they believe they will age better than their parents, the survey identified demographic differences in opinion. People in their 30s were the least optimistic (56%) about aging better than their parents, while people in their 80s were the most optimistic (92%). Differences were also revealed by household description, with people with children in the household (63%) less optimistic than people without children in the household (73%).

The survey also explored changes experienced by respondents in the past five years due to aging, identifying that women were significantly more likely than men to say that they had experienced weight gain (46% vs 35%) and difficulty sleeping (46% vs 34%).

Health-Related Conversations: By the Decades
The Mayo Clinic National Health Check-Up revealed the following evolution in health-related conversations with friends as we age:
• 20s—Healthful meal options;
• 30s—Maintaining healthy weight, parents' health issues;
• 40s—Maintaining healthy weight, children's health issues; and
• 50s–80s—Their own health issues.

— Source: Mayo Clinic