Psychosocial risk factors for coronary heart disease, their importance compared with other risk factors and gender differences in sensitivity
Autor: | Jan Lisspers, Gunilla Burell, Tina Hallman, S. Setterlind, Anders Odén |
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Rok vydání: | 2001 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male medicine.medical_specialty Epidemiology Coronary Disease Social Environment Sensitivity and Specificity Sex Factors Sex factors Risk Factors Internal medicine Medicine Humans cardiovascular diseases Sweden business.industry Case-control study Social environment Middle Aged Coronary heart disease Occupational Diseases Socioeconomic Factors Case-Control Studies Physical therapy Regression Analysis Women's Health Female Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine business Psychosocial Stress Psychological |
Zdroj: | Journal of cardiovascular risk. 8(1) |
ISSN: | 1350-6277 |
Popis: | Few studies have focused on risk factors in women's lives concerning psychosocial factors and coronary heart disease (CHD). The present study is one of a series in which a wide range of psychosocial factors will be analysed with a focus on women. Women and men have been compared with respect to sensitivity to psychosocial risk factors regarding CHD. The importance of psychosocial risk factors for women, compared with biomedical risk factors has also been studied.A questionnaire (The Stress Profile) was answered by 538 rehabilitation participants (97 women, 441 men) and a reference group (5308 women, 5177 men), aged 40-65 years. Psychosocial factors were investigated using means and b-coefficients. Comparisons between psychosocial and biomedical risk factors were made, with respect to the product of the beta-coefficient and the standard deviation for each compared risk factor.Significant differences appeared concerning five areas: work content, workload and control, physical stress reactions, emotional stress reactions and burnout. All showed that the relative sensitivity was larger for women than for men. Predictive psychosocial risk factors for women with respect to CHD were physical stress reactions, emotional stress reactions, burnout, family relationships and daily hassles/satisfactions, and they were on approximately the same level as biomedical risk factors.Women appear to be more sensitive than men with respect to psychosocial risk factors for CHD, and the predictive ability of psychosocial risk factors shows great importance. Actions against unhealthy psychosocial conditions are recommended. Both presumptive CHD patients and others might benefit from preventive actions, and since women are more sensitive they will probably gain more than men. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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