Bartley M, Sacker A, Firth D, Fitzpatrick R
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London Medical School, UK.
Soc Sci Med. 1999 Jan;48(1):99-115. doi: 10.1016/s0277-9536(98)00293-7.
The aim of this study is to investigate the relationships between social roles, social position and health in English women using theoretically derived measures of social position. Data are taken from the Health and Lifestyle Survey, carried out between 1984-1985, and the Health Survey for England of 1993. First the paper asks whether health inequality in women is still evident when theoretically derived measures (the Erikson-Goldthorpe schema and the Cambridge scale) are used. It goes on to explore the extent to which different combinations of family roles and employment circumstances might affect social variations in health. Finally, the paper shows that health differences between women in different combinations of social roles were not the same in 1993 as in 1984 and examines some reasons why this change may have occurred.
本研究旨在运用理论推导的社会地位衡量方法,调查英国女性的社会角色、社会地位与健康之间的关系。数据取自1984 - 1985年进行的《健康与生活方式调查》以及1993年的《英格兰健康调查》。首先,本文探讨当使用理论推导的衡量方法(埃里克森 - 戈德索普模式和剑桥量表)时,女性健康不平等是否依然明显。接着,研究不同家庭角色和就业状况的组合在多大程度上可能影响健康方面的社会差异。最后,本文表明,1993年不同社会角色组合的女性之间的健康差异与1984年不同,并且探讨了这种变化可能发生的一些原因。