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Perceived Barriers Affecting Adherence to Healthy Eating and Exercise Guidelines among Obese Active-Duty Military Personnel of the South African National Defence Force


Magdeline Alcock

Abstract

The World Health Organization defines overweight and obesity as an excessive or a disproportionate accumulation of body fat that  impairs health. The South African military community is a subset of the general population, and is not exempt from the effects of  overweight and obesity. Military recruitment and operational preparedness are directly affected by obesity as it affects members’  physical fitness, overall health, and capacity to perform duties optimally. The South African Military Health Services uses a  multidisciplinary approach for the treatment and prevention of obesity and related conditions. Assessing perceived barriers to physical  activity and healthy eating within the military environment could contribute to the development of effective and relevant programmes to  address weight management and mitigate the health consequences of obesity. The current cross-sectional study was conducted in  Bloemfontein, and comprised 58 randomly selected active-duty military personnel diagnosed with obesity, who completed a self- administered questionnaire. Correlation analysis was used to investigate the association between continuous data by calculating the  Pearson’s correlation coefficient. Analytical statistics, namely the independent T-test or analysis of the variance, was used to compare  mean values among groups. The five items identified as barriers to healthy eating habits were liking food too much, difficulty controlling  cravings, staying motivated, perceiving healthy food to be expensive, and a lack of will power. The five items identified as barriers to  physical activity were a lack of will power to get started, social activities that do not include physical activity, a lack of physical training  centres and shower facilities at work, no motivation to stick to a plan for healthy eating, and being too busy. Factors related to the  military environment did not affect perceived barriers. A multidisciplinary and coordinated approach might enable the target population  to attain better health outcomes, as the identified barriers were related to social and environmental factors and perceptions of self- efficacy. Further investigation into the enablers and motivators of behaviour change in this population would shed more light on  addressing the apparent lack of motivation that persists among active-duty military personnel. 


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2224-0020
print ISSN: 1022-8136