van Hedel Karen, Mejía-Guevara Iván, Avendaño Mauricio, Sabbath Erika L, Berkman Lisa F, Mackenbach Johan P, van Lenthe Frank J
Karen van Hedel, Johan P. Mackenbach, and Frank J. van Lenthe are with the Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. Iván Mejía-Guevara and Lisa F. Berkman are with the Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health, Cambridge, MA. Mauricio Avendaño is with the Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, King's College London, London, UK. Erika L. Sabbath is with the School of Social Work, Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA.
Am J Public Health. 2016 Aug;106(8):1449-56. doi: 10.2105/AJPH.2016.303264. Epub 2016 Jun 16.
To investigate whether less-healthy work-family life histories contribute to the higher cardiovascular disease prevalence in older American compared with European women.
We used sequence analysis to identify distinct work-family typologies for women born between 1935 and 1956 in the United States and 13 European countries. Data came from the US Health and Retirement Study (1992-2006) and the Survey of Health, Aging, and Retirement in Europe (2004-2009).
Work-family typologies were similarly distributed in the United States and Europe. Being a lone working mother predicted a higher risk of heart disease, stroke, and smoking among American women, and smoking for European women. Lone working motherhood was more common and had a marginally stronger association with stroke in the United States than in Europe. Simulations indicated that the higher stroke risk among American women would only be marginally reduced if American women had experienced the same work-family trajectories as European women.
Combining work and lone motherhood was more common in the United States, but differences in work-family trajectories explained only a small fraction of the higher cardiovascular risk of American relative to European women.
调查与欧洲女性相比,不太健康的工作-家庭生活经历是否导致美国老年女性心血管疾病患病率更高。
我们使用序列分析来确定1935年至1956年在美国和13个欧洲国家出生的女性不同的工作-家庭类型。数据来自美国健康与退休研究(1992 - 2006年)以及欧洲健康、老龄化和退休调查(2004 - 2009年)。
工作-家庭类型在美国和欧洲的分布相似。对于美国女性而言,成为单身职业母亲预示着患心脏病、中风和吸烟的风险更高,而对于欧洲女性而言,预示着吸烟风险更高。在美国,单身职业母亲的情况更为普遍,且与中风的关联略强于欧洲。模拟结果表明,如果美国女性经历与欧洲女性相同的工作-家庭轨迹,美国女性中风风险仅会略有降低。
在美国,工作与单身母亲身份相结合的情况更为常见,但工作-家庭轨迹的差异仅解释了美国女性相对于欧洲女性心血管疾病风险较高的一小部分原因。