Risk factors for coronary heart disease in different socioeconomic groups of Lithuania and Sweden — the LiVicordia study
Autor: | Björn Bergdahl, Margareta Kristenson, Zita Ausrele Kucinskiene, Kristina Orth-Gomér |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Employment
Male 050103 clinical psychology medicine.medical_specialty Hydrocortisone Coronary Disease Antioxidants 03 medical and health sciences Chd mortality Risk Factors Epidemiology Humans Medicine 0501 psychology and cognitive sciences Risk factor Socioeconomic status Sweden 030505 public health business.industry 05 social sciences Urban Health Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Lithuania General Medicine Lithuanian Middle Aged beta Carotene Coronary heart disease Antioxidant vitamins language.human_language Oxidative Stress Social Class Socioeconomic Factors language 0305 other medical science business Psychosocial Stress Psychological Demography |
Zdroj: | Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. 29:140-150 |
ISSN: | 1651-1905 1403-4948 |
DOI: | 10.1177/14034948010290020101 |
Popis: | Aims: Lithuanian middle-aged men have a fourfold higher risk for coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality compared with Swedish men. In Sweden, CHD mortality is twice as high in blue- compared with white-collar workers. Whether the same risk factors that characterized Lithuanian men, compared with Swedish men, could be found in low socioeconomic groups within the cities was investigated. Methods : The LiVicordia study compared both traditional and new possible risk factors for CHD among 150 50-year-old men in Linköping, Sweden and Vilnius, Lithuania. A comparison was made of the prevalence of these risk factors in high and low socioeconomic groups within the cities and, after controlling for the city, variations across socioeconomic groups in the total sample. Results: Small differences were found in traditional risk factors between cities. However, Vilnius men were shorter, had lower serum levels of antioxidant vitamins, more psychosocial strain, and lower cortisol response to a standardized laboratory stress test. These characteristics were also found among men in low social classes in both cities. In linear regression models, short stature, low serum β-carotene, low social integration, coping and self-esteem, high vital exhaustion, high baseline and low cortisol response to stress were related to low social class. Conclusions: The same set of risk factors, mainly relating to oxidative and psychosocial stress, that characterized Vilnius men was also found in men in low social classes within the cities. The results suggest that a common set of risk factors may help to explain health differences both between and within countries. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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