Gender disparity and risk of noncommunicable disease among adults in Islamic Republic of Iran.

IF 1.7 4区 医学 Q3 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal Pub Date : 2023-08-31 DOI:10.26719/emhj.23.046
Ebrahim Rahimi, Rasool Mohammadi, Yaser Mokhayeri, Seyed Ss Nazari
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Abstract

Background: The relationship between gender disparity and the risk of developing noncommunicable disease and other social health determinants has not been well researched in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Aims: To assess how gender disparity contributes to the overall risk of noncommunicable disease in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Methods: This was a secondary analysis of data on about 11 000 adults aged 15-69 years from the 2011 WHO STEPwise approach to NCD risk factor surveillance (STEPS) survey in the Islamic Republic of Iran. The outcome variable in our analysis was the noncommunicable disease risk factor index. We used an extension of the Blinder-Oaxaca decomposition model to decompose the predicted mean difference in this index. Sampling method, study design and sex were considered in the analysis. The predictor variables were age, household assets index, education, employment status, ethnicity, and residence.

Results: The overall mean (standard deviation) noncommunicable disease risk score was 39.26 (22.4). The risk score for women was significantly higher than for men (41.75 versus 36.84; P < 0.001). About 35% of gender disparity in risk score was due to the differences in distribution of the predictor variables (explained component); of these, age contributed the most (23.79%), followed by education (7.82%). The different gender effects on work status and age made the largest contributions to the unexplained component of the disparity, 36.40% and 14.82%, respectively.

Conclusions: Policies to reduce the risk of noncommunicable diseases need to consider gender groups and how gender affects social determinants such as employment status to make some gender subgroups more vulnerable than others.

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伊朗伊斯兰共和国成人中的性别差异和非传染性疾病风险。
背景:在伊朗伊斯兰共和国,性别差异与发生非传染性疾病风险和其他社会健康决定因素之间的关系尚未得到很好的研究。目的:评估性别差异如何导致伊朗伊斯兰共和国非传染性疾病的总体风险。方法:这是对2011年世卫组织在伊朗伊斯兰共和国开展的非传染性疾病风险因素监测逐步方法(STEPS)调查中约11000名15-69岁成年人数据的二次分析。我们分析的结果变量是非传染性疾病危险因素指数。我们使用Blinder-Oaxaca分解模型的扩展来分解该指数的预测均值差。在分析中考虑了抽样方法、研究设计和性别。预测变量为年龄、家庭资产指数、教育程度、就业状况、种族和居住地。结果:总体平均(标准差)非传染性疾病风险评分为39.26分(22.4分)。女性的风险评分明显高于男性(41.75比36.84;P < 0.001)。风险评分中约35%的性别差异是由于预测变量(已解释成分)分布的差异;其中,年龄贡献最大(23.79%),其次是教育(7.82%)。性别对工作状态和年龄的影响最大,分别占36.40%和14.82%。结论:减少非传染性疾病风险的政策需要考虑性别群体以及性别如何影响就业状况等社会决定因素,从而使某些性别亚群体比其他性别亚群体更脆弱。
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来源期刊
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal
Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICESPUBLIC, ENV-PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
4.80%
发文量
112
期刊介绍: The Eastern Mediterranean Health Journal, established in 1995, is the flagship health periodical of the World Health Organization Regional Office for the Eastern Mediterranean. The mission of the Journal is to contribute to improving health in the Eastern Mediterranean Region by publishing and publicising quality health research and information with emphasis on public health and the strategic health priorities of the Region. It aims to: further public health knowledge, policy, practice and education; support health policy-makers, researchers and practitioners; and enable health professionals to remain informed of developments in public health. The EMHJ: -publishes original peer-reviewed research and reviews in all areas of public health of relevance to the Eastern Mediterranean Region -encourages, in particular, research related to the regional health priorities, namely: health systems strengthening; emergency preparedness and response; communicable diseases; noncommunicable diseases and mental health; reproductive, maternal, child health and nutrition -provides up-to-date information on public health developments with special reference to the Region. The Journal addresses all members of the health profession, health educational institutes, as well as governmental and nongovernmental organizations in the area of public health within and outside the Region.
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