AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to explore why men and women differ in summary health-related quality of life (HRQoL), focusing on physical and psychological health dimensions and the role of sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors.
  • Data was collected from 3,648 adults using various health assessments to analyze gender differences in HRQoL, with findings showing that men generally reported better overall health and less pain than women, but these differences were influenced by factors like income and marital status.
  • The results indicate that while men tend to have better health outcomes in physical and psychosocial dimensions, these disparities are partly due to socioeconomic inequalities, emphasizing the need to address these factors to improve health equity between genders.

Article Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of the study was to examine whether gender differences in summary health-related quality of life (HRQoL) are due to differences in specific dimensions of health, and whether they are explained by sociodemographic and socioeconomic (SES) variation.

Methods: The National Health Measurement Study collected cross-sectional data on a national sample of 3648 black and white noninstitutionalized adults ages 35 to 89 years. Data included the Short Form 36-Item survey, which yielded separate Mental and Physical Component Summary scores (MCS and PCS, respectively), and five HRQoL indexes: Short Form 6 dimension, EuroQol 5 dimension, the Health Utilities Indexes Mark 2 and 3, and the Quality of Well-Being Scale Self-Administered form. Structural equation models were used to explore gender differences in physical, psychosocial, and pain latent dimensions of the 5 indexes, adjusting for sociodemographic and SES indicators. Observed MCS and PCS scores were examined in regression models to judge robustness of latent results.

Results: Men had better estimated physical and psychosocial health and less pain than women with similar trends on the MCS and PCS scores. Adjustments for marital status or income reduced gender differences more than did other indicators. Adjusting results for partial factorial invariance of HRQoL attributes supported the presence of gender differentials, but also indicated that these differences are impacted by dimensions being related to some HRQoL attributes differently by gender.

Conclusions: Men have better estimated health on 3 latent dimensions of HRQoL-physical, psychosocial, and pain-comparable to gender differences on the observed MCS and PCS scores. Gender differences are partly explained by sociodemographic and SES factors, highlighting the role of socioeconomic inequalities in perpetuating gender differences in health outcomes across multiple domains. These results also emphasize the importance of accounting for measurement invariance for meaningful comparison of group differences in estimated means of self-reported measures of health.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3687080PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/MLR.0b013e31822ebed9DOI Listing

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