Frank E, Brogan D J, Mokdad A H, Simoes E J, Kahn H S, Greenberg R S
School of Public Health, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Arch Intern Med. 1998 Feb 23;158(4):342-8. doi: 10.1001/archinte.158.4.342.
To examine the health-related behaviors of women physicians compared with those of other women of high and not high socioeconomic status and with national goals.
We examined the results of a questionnaire-based survey of a stratified random sample, the Women Physicians' Health Study, and a US telephone survey (Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Ga). We analyzed 3 samples of women aged 30 to 70 years: (1) respondents from the Women Physicians' Health Study (n = 4501); (2) respondents from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (n = 1316) of the highest socioeconomic status; and (3) all other respondents from the Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (n = 35,361).
Women physicians were more likely than other women of high socioeconomic status and even more likely than other women not to smoke. The few physicians (3.7%) who smoked reported consuming fewer cigarettes per day, and physicians who had stopped smoking reported quitting at a younger age than women in the general population. Women physicians were less likely to report abstaining from alcohol, but those who drank reported consuming less alcohol per episode than other women and were less likely to report binging on alcohol than women in the general population. Unlike women in the general population and even other women of high socioeconomic status, women physicians' reported behaviors exceeded national goals for the year 2000 in all examined behaviors and screening habits.
Women physicians report having generally good health habits even when compared with other socioeconomically advantaged women and report exceeding all examined national goals for personal screening practices and other personal health behaviors. Women physicians' behaviors may provide useful standards for other women in the United States.
比较女医生与社会经济地位高和不高的其他女性的健康相关行为,并与国家目标进行对比。
我们研究了基于问卷调查的分层随机样本(女医生健康研究)以及美国电话调查(佐治亚州亚特兰大疾病控制与预防中心的行为危险因素监测系统)的结果。我们分析了3组年龄在30至70岁之间的女性样本:(1)女医生健康研究的受访者(n = 4501);(2)社会经济地位最高的行为危险因素监测系统的受访者(n = 1316);(3)行为危险因素监测系统的所有其他受访者(n = 35361)。
女医生比社会经济地位高的其他女性更不易吸烟,甚至比其他女性更不易吸烟。少数吸烟的医生(3.7%)报告每天吸烟量较少,而且戒烟的医生报告戒烟年龄比普通人群中的女性更小。女医生报告戒酒的可能性较小,但饮酒的女医生每次饮酒量比其他女性少,而且与普通人群中的女性相比,报告酗酒的可能性较小。与普通人群中的女性甚至社会经济地位高的其他女性不同,女医生报告的行为在所有检查的行为和筛查习惯方面都超过了2000年的国家目标。
即使与其他社会经济条件优越的女性相比,女医生报告的健康习惯总体良好,并且报告在个人筛查实践和其他个人健康行为方面超过了所有检查的国家目标。女医生的行为可能为美国其他女性提供有用的标准。