Literature DB >> 9625214

Increased psychosocial strain in Lithuanian versus Swedish men: the LiVicordia study.

M Kristenson1, Z Kucinskienë, B Bergdahl, H Calkauskas, V Urmonas, K Orth-Gomér.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality is four times higher in 50-year-old Lithuanian men than in 50-year-old Swedish men. The difference cannot be explained by standard risk factors. The objective of this study was to examine differences in psychosocial risk factors for CHD in the two countries.
METHODS: The LiVicordia study is a cross-sectional survey comparing 150 randomly selected 50-year-old men in each of the two cities: Vilnius, Lithuania, and Linköping, Sweden. As part of the study, a broad range of psychosocial characteristics, known to predict CHD, were investigated.
RESULTS: In the men from Vilnius compared with those from Linköping, we found a cluster of psychosocial risk factors for CHD; higher job strain (p <.01), lower social support at work, lower emotional support, and lower social integration (p values <.001). Vilnius men also showed lower coping, self-esteem, and sense of coherence (p values < .001), higher vital exhaustion, and depression (p values < .001). Quality of life and perceived health were lower and expectations of ill health within 5 to 10 years were higher in Vilnius men (p values < .001). Correlations between measurements on traditional and psychosocial risk factors were few and weak.
CONCLUSIONS: The Vilnius men, representing the population with a four-fold higher CHD mortality, had unfavorable characteristics on a cluster of psychosocial risk factors for CHD in comparison with the Linköping men. We suggest that this finding may provide a basis for possible new explanations of the differences in CHD mortality between Lithuania and Sweden.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9625214     DOI: 10.1097/00006842-199805000-00011

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Psychosom Med        ISSN: 0033-3174            Impact factor:   4.312


  26 in total

1.  Attenuated cortisol response to a standardized stress test in Lithuanian versus Swedish men: the LiVicordia study.

Authors:  M Kristenson; K Orth-Gomér; Z Kucinskienë; B Bergdahl; H Calkauskas; I Balinkyniene; A G Olsson
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  1998

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3.  Good self-rated health is related to psychosocial resources and a strong cortisol response to acute stress: the LiVicordia study of middle-aged men.

Authors:  Margareta Kristenson; Anders G Olsson; Zita Kucinskiene
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5.  Life satisfaction in older women in Latvia and Sweden-relations to standard of living, aspects of health and coping behaviour.

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8.  Depression, perceived control, and life satisfaction in university students from Central-Eastern and Western Europe.

Authors:  Jane Wardle; Andrew Steptoe; Gabriel Gulis; Gudrun Sartory; Helena Sêk; Irina Todorova; Claus Vögele; Michal Ziarko
Journal:  Int J Behav Med       Date:  2004

9.  Low job control and myocardial infarction risk in the occupational categories of Kaunas men, Lithuania.

Authors:  V Malinauskiene; T Theorell; R Grazuleviciene; R Malinauskas; A Azaraviciene
Journal:  J Epidemiol Community Health       Date:  2004-02       Impact factor: 3.710

10.  Biological mechanisms of disease and death in Moscow: rationale and design of the survey on Stress Aging and Health in Russia (SAHR).

Authors:  Maria Shkolnikova; Svetlana Shalnova; Vladimir M Shkolnikov; Victoria Metelskaya; Alexander Deev; Evgueni Andreev; Dmitri Jdanov; James W Vaupel
Journal:  BMC Public Health       Date:  2009-08-13       Impact factor: 3.295

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