Literature DB >> 8778956

How sick is the West of Scotland? Age specific comparisons with national datasets on a range of health measures.

P West1, G Ford, K Hunt, S Macintyre, R Ecob.   

Abstract

The Central Clydeside Conurbation (CCC) has relatively high mortality rates. This paper examines whether it also has relatively high rates of ill health, using data from three cohorts (aged 15, 35 and 55 in 1987/88) in the West of Scotland. Comparisons on a range of self-reported physical and mental health indicators, anthropometric measures, blood pressure, and respiratory function were made with comparable age groups in ten British or Scottish national studies. The older two cohorts in the CCC exhibited relatively high rates of longstanding and limiting longstanding illness and the youngest cohort had relatively poor psychosocial health, compared to their age peers elsewhere. Fewer differences were found in blood pressure, anthropometric measures or respiratory function although older CCC residents were slightly shorter than in Britain as a whole and had slightly poorer respiratory function. Central Clydesiders in the late 1980s were generally in poorer health than those of the same sex and similar age elsewhere in the UK, but the extent of the disadvantage varied across different dimensions of health, and was not as marked as some stereotypes of the West of Scotland would suggest.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8778956     DOI: 10.1177/003693309403900403

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scott Med J        ISSN: 0036-9330            Impact factor:   0.729


  4 in total

1.  Inequality in health and health service use for mothers of young children in south west England. Survey Team of the Avon Longitudinal Study of Pregnancy and Childhood Team.

Authors:  D Baker; H Taylor
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  1997-02       Impact factor: 3.710

2.  Does IQ explain socioeconomic inequalities in health? Evidence from a population based cohort study in the west of Scotland.

Authors:  G David Batty; Geoff Der; Sally Macintyre; Ian J Deary
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2006-02-01

3.  Symptom experience and subsequent mortality: results from the West of Scotland Twenty-07 study.

Authors:  Alison M Elliott; Philip C Hannaford; Blair H Smith; Sally Wyke; Kate Hunt
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2006-12-11       Impact factor: 2.655

4.  Explanations for female excess psychosomatic symptoms in adolescence: evidence from a school-based cohort in the West of Scotland.

Authors:  Helen N Sweeting; Patrick B West; Geoff J Der
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2007-10-22       Impact factor: 3.295

  4 in total

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