Male and female health problems in general practice: The differential impact of social position and social roles

https://doi.org/10.1016/0277-9536(95)80004-4Get rights and content

Abstract

Sex, social position and social roles have been identified as important health predictors. Moreover, various social variables have been found to bear differently upon female as compared to male health.

This study analyses data from a large-scale registration project in general practice (the Continuous Morbidity Registration), pertaining to the medical diagnoses of nearly 10,000 patients over a five year period. The effects of sex, social class, marital and parental status on a number of distinct categories of health problems were established, and a possible differential impact of social position and social roles on male and female health was explored. Categories of health problems studied were ‘overall health problems’, ‘sex specific conditions’, ‘symptoms without disease’, ‘prevention and diagnostics’ and ‘trauma’.

Sex and, above all, social class were identified as important predictors of most categories of health problems, especially during the reproductive period of life. Marital status and parental status did not contribute substantially to most types of health problems. Rates of prevention and diagnostics, sex specific conditions and total number of health problems could to a certain extent be predicted by the four sociodemographic variables, as opposed to trauma rates and symptoms without disease rates. Social class appeared the only variable with a substantially different effect on male vs female rates of sex specific conditions, prevention and diagnostics and trauma, but not so for overall health problems and symptoms without disease. Marital status and parental status did not differ significantly in their effect on male vs female health. Results illustrate that differentiation of the health variable into categories of health problems elucidates the relationship between sex, social variables and health.

References (80)

  • S. Macintyre et al.

    Lack of class variation in health in adolescence: an artefact of an occupational measure of social class?

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1991)
  • C. Power

    Social and economic background and class inequalities in health among young adults

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1991)
  • D. Vågero

    Inequality in health—some theoretical empirical problems

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1991)
  • R. Illsley et al.

    Contextual variation in the meaning of health inequality

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1991)
  • S. Arber

    Class, paid employment and family roles: making sense of structural disadvantage, gender and health status

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1991)
  • S. Jennings et al.

    Women and work: an investigation of the association between health and employment status in middle-aged women

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1984)
  • O. Anson et al.

    Women's health and labour force status: An enquiry using a multi-point measure of labour force participation

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1987)
  • M.H. Brenner et al.

    Unemployment and health in the context of economic change

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1983)
  • W.J.H.M.van den Bosch

    Epidemiologische aspecten van morbiditeit bij kinderen

  • S. Macintyre

    Gender differences in the perceptions of common cold symptoms

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1993)
  • S. Arber et al.

    Gender and inequalities in health in later life

    Soc. Sci. Med.

    (1993)
  • L.M. Verbrugge

    Females and illness: recent trends in sex differences in the United States

    J. Hlth soc. Behav.

    (1976)
  • P.D. Clearly et al.

    Sex differences in medical care utilization: an empirical investigation

    J. Hlth soc. Behav.

    (1982)
  • L.M. Verbrugge

    Sex differentials in health

    Publ. Hlth Rep.

    (1982)
  • S.M. Hunt et al.

    Perceived health: age and sex comparisons in a community

    J. Epidem. Comm. Hlth

    (1984)
  • L.M. Verbrugge et al.

    Sex differentials in health and mortality

    Wom. Hlth

    (1987)
  • L.M. Verbrugge

    The twain meet: empirical explanations of sex differences in health and mortality

    J. Hlth soc. Behav.

    (1989)
  • R.M. Kaplan et al.

    Gender differences in health-related quality of life

    Hlth. Psychol.

    (1991)
  • L.S. Fidell

    Sex role stereotypes and the American physician

    Psychol. Wom. Q.

    (1979–1980)
  • J.N. Clarke

    Sexism, feminism and medicalism: a decade review of literature on gender and illness

    Sociol. Hlth. Illness

    (1983)
  • Waddell C. and Floate P. Research note: gender and the utilization of health carte services in Perth, Australia....
  • H. Lamberts
    (1984)
  • E.J.G.van den Brekel

    Sekseverschillen in gezondheid en medische consumptie

    Maandbericht Gezondheidsstatistiek

    (1987)
  • C.M.T. Gijsbers van Wijk et al.

    Symptom sensitivity and sex differences in physical morbidity

    Wom. Hlth.

    (1991)
  • D.H.de Bakker et al.

    Man-vrouw verschillen in gezondheid en medische consumptie

    NIVEL report

    (1992)
  • A. Baum et al.

    Gender, stress, and health

    Hlth. Psychol.

    (1991)
  • W.R. Gove et al.

    Possible causes of the apparent sex differences in physical health: an empirical investigation

    Am. sociol. Rev.

    (1979)
  • L.M. Verbrugge

    Comment on Walter R. Gove and Michael Hughes. Possible causes of the apparent sex differences in physical health

    Am. Sociol. Rev.

    (1980)
  • Mechanic D. Comment on Walter R. Gove and Michael Hughes. Am. Sociol. Rev.45,...
  • A.C. Marcus et al.

    Sex differences in reports of illness and disability: a preliminary test of the “fixed role obligations” hypothesis

    J. Hlth soc. Behav.

    (1981)
  • Cited by (59)

    • Explaining gender differences in ill-health in South Korea: The roles of socio-structural, psychosocial, and behavioral factors

      2008, Social Science and Medicine
      Citation Excerpt :

      Additionally, women are more likely to encounter undesirable life events and probably concurrent stress and strain (Mcleod & Kessler, 1990), which could account for higher female morbidity. While issues of higher female susceptibility to symptoms are not disregarded in the gender and health literature, there is substantial evidence to refute the “reporting artifact” explanation (Gijsbers van Wijk, Kolk, van den Bosch, & van den Hoogen, 1995; Macintyre, Ford, & Hunt, 1999). We have argued that socially produced gender inequality could be a strong casual factor in women's health in South Korea with its distinctive patriarchal system, namely the gender imbalance in economic power and political authority.

    View all citing articles on Scopus
    View full text