Women fall sick more often than men
January 1st, 2012 - 5:04 pm ICT by IANSLondon, Jan 1 (IANS) Women may visit doctors more often than men because they fall sick more often. They are more likely to suffer from arthritis, mental disorders and muscular problems.
Scientists, led by Davide Malmusi of the Public Health Agency of Barcelona, found that women reported health problems more often. However, they also suffered from a higher rate of chronic diseases.
“These results suggest that the poorer self-rated health of women is a reflection of the higher burden of disease they suffer,” said Malmusi, the European Journal of Public Health reports.
The researchers looked at data from Spain’s 2006 National Health Survey, which included interviews with 29,000 people who covered a wide age-range on how they rated their health, according to the Daily Mail.
They found that 38.8 percent of women said their health was poor or very poor with 25.7 percent saying a chronic condition limited their activity. This compared to 27 percent of men who said they had poor health and 19.3 percent reporting a chronic condition.
However, researchers found this gender difference disappeared when they matched how many chronic conditions each person had with their health rating.
Women were no more likely than men to claim to have poorer health than men when they had the same condition. Women were actually more likely to report better health than men when they had the same number of conditions.
- Aging LGB adults more likely to suffer chronic disease, mental distress - Mar 30, 2011
- Women moan more about poor health than men - Mar 26, 2010
- Pelvic pain may lead to migraine in women - Dec 26, 2010
- Why women suffer headaches more than men? - Aug 13, 2010
- Losing a job increases risk of dying prematurely - Apr 05, 2011
- Ageing baby boomers face hardships - Apr 05, 2012
- Jobless men 'at greater risk of dying prematurely' - Apr 05, 2011
- Poor leadership linked to health risk at workplace - Nov 03, 2009
- Baby boomers increase midlife suicide rate - Sep 28, 2010
- Men in noisy jobs likelier to suffer hearing problems, heart diseases - Feb 22, 2011
- It's official: Men have more memory problems than women - Sep 07, 2010
- Low-income women more likely to suffer ill health - Jan 04, 2010
- 'Drunkorexia' combines worst of eating, drinking - Oct 19, 2011
- Chinese are 8 years older than real age - May 17, 2012
- Diabetic women with depression at higher risk of dying from heart disease - Jan 04, 2011
Tags: arthritis, better health, burden of disease, chronic condition, chronic conditions, chronic diseases, daily mail, doctors, european journal of public health, gender difference, health problems, journal of public health, london jan, mental disorders, muscular problems, national health survey, poor health, public health agency, reflection, scientists