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      Socioeconomic differences in self-assessed health in a chronically ill population: the role of different health aspects.

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          Abstract

          We investigated the role that different health aspects play in the explanation of socioeconomic differences in self-assessed health. Socioeconomic differences in self-assessed health were investigated in relation to chronic disease, functional limitations, psychosomatic symptoms, and perceived discomfort/distress. In multiple logistic regression analyses, for three cutoff points of self-assessed health, significant socioeconomic differences in self-assessed health could be observed after adjusting for age and gender. After separate adjustment for each of the four health aspects, the analyses showed that for a health assessment as less-than-good and less-than-fair, psychosomatic symptoms were the most powerful explanatory factor. Perceived discomfort/distress proved to be the most powerful factor for a poor health assessment. We found that socioeconomic differences in self-assessed health could, to a large extent (72-80%), be explained through socioeconomic differences in the prevalence of the four types of health problems included in the study. For all cutoff points, objective health aspects accounted for a relatively small part of the socioeconomic variability in self-assessed health. More subjective aspects of health accounted for more of the variability.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J Behav Med
          Journal of behavioral medicine
          Springer Science and Business Media LLC
          0160-7715
          0160-7715
          Oct 2000
          : 23
          : 5
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands. simon@mgz.fgg.eur.nl
          Article
          10.1023/a:1005552814010
          11039154
          80376044-0cd0-44ac-87c7-46fa4c21fa18
          History

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