Kühn Mine, Dudel Christian, Vogt Tobias, Oksuzyan Anna
Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research, Konrad-Zuse Straße 1, 18057 Rostock, Germany.
Population Research Centre, University of Groningen, Landleven 1, 9747 AD Groningen, The Netherlands.
SSM Popul Health. 2018 Dec 1;7:100326. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2018.100326. eCollection 2019 Apr.
Before 1990, Germany was divided for more than 40 years. While divided, significant mortality disparities between the populations of East and West Germany emerged. In the years following reunification, East German mortality improved considerably, eventually converging with West German levels. In this study, we explore changes in the gender differences in health at ages 20-59 across the eastern and western regions of Germany using data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP) for the 1990-2013 period. We apply random-effects linear regressions to the SOEP data to identify trends in health, measured as self-assessed health satisfaction, after German reunification. The findings indicate that women were substantially less satisfied with their health than men in both West and East Germany, but that the gender gap was larger in East Germany than in West Germany. Furthermore, the results show that respondents' satisfaction with their health decreased over time, and that the decline was steeper among men - and particularly among East German men - than among women. Thus, the initial male advantage in health in East and West Germany in the years immediately after reunification diminished over time, and even reversed to become a female advantage in East Germany. One interpretation of this finding is that stress-inducing post-reunification changes in the political and social landscape of East Germany had lasting damaging consequences for men's health. Ongoing risky health behaviors and high levels of economic insecurity due to unemployment could have had long-lasting effects on the health of the working-aged population. A partial explanation for our finding that health declined more sharply among East German men than among their female counterparts could be that women have better compensatory mechanisms than men for dealing with psychosocial stress.
1990年以前,德国分裂了40多年。分裂期间,东德和西德人口之间出现了显著的死亡率差异。统一后的几年里,东德的死亡率大幅改善,最终与西德水平趋同。在本研究中,我们利用1990 - 2013年德国社会经济面板(SOEP)的数据,探讨德国东部和西部20 - 59岁人群健康方面的性别差异变化。我们对SOEP数据应用随机效应线性回归,以确定德国统一后以自我评估的健康满意度衡量的健康趋势。研究结果表明,在西德和东德,女性对自身健康的满意度都远低于男性,但东德的性别差距大于西德。此外,结果显示,受访者对自身健康的满意度随时间下降,且男性——尤其是东德男性——的下降幅度比女性更大。因此,统一后 immediately 几年中东德和西德男性在健康方面最初的优势随着时间推移逐渐减弱,在东德甚至逆转,变成了女性优势。这一发现的一种解释是,统一后东德政治和社会环境变化带来的压力对男性健康产生了持久的破坏性影响。持续的危险健康行为以及由于失业导致的高度经济不安全感可能对劳动年龄人口的健康产生了长期影响。我们发现东德男性健康下降幅度比女性更大的一个部分解释可能是,在应对心理社会压力方面,女性比男性有更好的补偿机制。