Literature DB >> 3739360

Role burdens and physical health of women and men.

L M Verbrugge.   

Abstract

This article looks at role burdens experienced by women and men, asking if heavy burdens are linked with poor physical health status and frequent health care. The role burden variables refer to job schedule, feelings about roles and life, time constraints and pressures, family dependency, and levels of role involvement and responsibility. The data source is the Health In Detroit Study, which has health items from a retrospective interview and prospective health diaries. Results show that dissatisfaction with roles/life and feelings of very great or very little time pressure are associated with poor health. To a lesser extent, very low or very high objective time constraints, irregular and short job schedules, no or high family dependency, and very low or very high income responsibility are linked with poor health. By contrast, having numerous roles is associated with good health. Some of these results point toward social causation (how the quantity and quality of roles influence health) and others to social selection (how health influences role involvements). The relationships are similar for women and men. But women are more at risk of poor health because, more often than men, they tend to have few roles (especially nonemployment), more dissatisfaction with their main role and life, low time constraints, low income responsibility, and irregular job schedules. In conclusion, role burdens may lie more in subjective feelings about one's activities than in their objective characteristics. Having low quality roles may jeopardize health, whereas having numerous ones can help maintain or enhance it.

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Year:  1986        PMID: 3739360     DOI: 10.1300/J013v11n01_04

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Women Health        ISSN: 0363-0242


  9 in total

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Authors:  S C Wilsnack; A D Klassen; B E Schur; R W Wilsnack
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4.  Social support and self-esteem as intervening variables in the relationship between social roles and women's well-being.

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Journal:  Community Ment Health J       Date:  1989

5.  Marital status, labour force activity and mortality: a study in the USA and six European countries.

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6.  Gender differences in health care access indicators in an urban, low-income community.

Authors:  C Merzel
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7.  Employment status and heart disease risk factors in middle-aged women: the Rancho Bernardo Study.

Authors:  D Kritz-Silverstein; D L Wingard; E Barrett-Connor
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  1992-02       Impact factor: 9.308

8.  Is the menopausal transition stressful? Observations of perceived stress from the Seattle Midlife Women's Health Study.

Authors:  Nancy Fugate Woods; Ellen Sullivan Mitchell; Don B Percival; Kathleen Smith-DiJulio
Journal:  Menopause       Date:  2009 Jan-Feb       Impact factor: 2.953

9.  Health and literacy in first- and second-generation Moroccan Berber women in the Netherlands: Ill literacy?

Authors:  Marrie HJ Bekker; Mina Lhajoui
Journal:  Int J Equity Health       Date:  2004-06-28
  9 in total

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