Hallman T, Burell G, Setterlind S, Odén A, Lisspers J
Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Section of Personal Injury Prevention, Karolinska Institutet, Box 12718, SE-112 94 Stockholm, Sweden.
J Cardiovasc Risk. 2001 Feb;8(1):39-49. doi: 10.1177/174182670100800106.
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.
很少有研究关注女性生活中与心理社会因素及冠心病(CHD)相关的风险因素。本研究是一系列研究之一,该系列将分析广泛的心理社会因素,重点关注女性。已就冠心病心理社会风险因素的敏感性对女性和男性进行了比较。还研究了心理社会风险因素相对于生物医学风险因素对女性的重要性。
538名康复参与者(97名女性,441名男性)以及一个参照组(5308名女性,5177名男性),年龄在40 - 65岁之间,回答了一份问卷(压力概况)。使用均值和b系数对心理社会因素进行调查。就每个比较的风险因素的β系数与标准差的乘积,对心理社会和生物医学风险因素进行了比较。
在五个方面出现了显著差异:工作内容、工作量与控制、身体应激反应、情绪应激反应和职业倦怠。所有方面都表明女性的相对敏感性高于男性。女性冠心病的预测性心理社会风险因素为身体应激反应、情绪应激反应、职业倦怠、家庭关系以及日常烦恼/满意度,且它们与生物医学风险因素处于大致相同的水平。
在冠心病心理社会风险因素方面,女性似乎比男性更敏感,且心理社会风险因素的预测能力显示出重要意义。建议针对不健康的心理社会状况采取行动。疑似冠心病患者和其他人可能会从预防行动中受益,而且由于女性更敏感,她们可能比男性获益更多。