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Gender differences Health Psychology

Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

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Page 1: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender differences

Health Psychology

Page 2: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b).

• Men are more likely to die from cancer, heart disease, HIV, accidents and suicide than women (D0H, 1998).

Page 3: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• Men are more likely to take risks with their health than women — on average they drink more alcohol, smoke more cigarettes, and take more drugs (c).

• They use less sun cream and are involved in more accidents (D0H, 2001 a).

Page 4: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• Men also have less contact with the health services than women. In response to the question ‘Have you consulted your GP in the last two weeks?’ 19 per cent of women and only 13 per cent of men said yes. The gender difference was even more pronounced for men under the age of 45 (10 per cent of men compared to 20 per cent of women) (ONS, 1998).

Page 5: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• Interestingly, other issues of inequality are more pronounced in men than women. In men, social class based on employment is the most important influence on early death. To put it brutally, the less you earn, the sooner you die. For women however, although there is still an effect of income on early death, it is much weaker (Sacker et aI., 2000).

Page 6: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• Women have higher morbidity rates but lower mortality rates. Women suffer more non-fatal chronic illnesses and more acute illnesses. They also make more visits to their family physicians and spend more time in hospital. Women suffer more from hypertension, kidney disease and auto immune diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis and lupus (Litt, 1993).

Page 7: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health

• They also suffer twice the rate of depression. Men, on the other hand, have a shorter life expectancy, suffer more injuries, suicides, homicides and heart disease.

Page 8: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Psychosocial and lifestyle differences are

likely to play a major role in mediating gender-related health differences. In industrialized societies women suffer more from poverty, stress from relationships, childbirth, rape, domestic violence, sexual discrimination, lower status work, concern about weight and the strain of dividing attention between competing roles of parent and worker.

Page 9: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Financial barriers may prevent

women, more than men, from engaging in healthier lifestyles and desirable behaviour change (O’Leary and Helgeson, 1997).

Page 10: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Social support derived from

friendships, intimate relationships and marriage, although significant, appears to be of less positive value to women than to men. Although physical and mental well-being generally benefit from social support, women often provide more emotional support to their families than they receive.

Page 11: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Thus, the loss of a spouse has a longer

and more devastating effect on the health of men than on that of women (Stroebe and Stroebe, 1983). The burden of caring for an elderly, infirm or dementing family member also tends to be greater for females in the family than for males, especially daughters (Grafstrom, 1994).

Page 12: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• While the health of women is a

focus for renewed efforts in health care, the health of men cannot be taken for granted. Men are more likely to suffer diseases of the cardiovascular system, more often suffer a violent death and die younger.

Page 13: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Biological explanations for the

difference between men and women for CHD point to the role of Oestrogen, that reduces blood clotting and cholesterol levels, whereas testosterone increases clotting (McGill and Stern 1979). Men respond to stresses in a way that is biologically more dangerous than it is for women.

Page 14: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• They show, under laboratory

conditions, greater stress hormone levels, blood pressure and cholesterol levels, than women. However, these differences are in part due to cultural factors. Women who take on traditionally male stressful jobs tend to exhibit similar biological responses as men (Lundberg et al, 1981).

Page 15: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Gender and Health• Men are more likely to be overweight,

smoke more frequently cigarettes containing higher levels of nicotine and tar, eat less healthily and drink more heavily than women (Reddy et al. 1992). They are more likely to work in unhealthy environments and be subjected to a greater risk of accidents.

Page 16: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

Page 17: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• The graph depicts how physician contacts vary with age and with another important factor, the pa tient’s gender. Women have a higher rate of physi cian contacts than men (USDHHS, 1987, 1991). This gender difference does not exist in childhood, but begins to appear during adolescence.

Page 18: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• Much of the gender difference in physician contacts in early adult hood certainly results from the medical care women require when they become pregnant. But even when physician visits for pregnancy and childbirth are not counted, women still use medical services more than men (Cleary, Mechanic, & Greenley, 1982; Ver brugge, 1985).

Page 19: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• The reasons for this difference in use of medical care are unclear, but researchers have offered several possible explanations (Verbrugge, 1980, 1985). One obvious explanation is that women may simply develop more illnesses that require medical attention.

Page 20: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• Although men are more likely than women to develop fatal chronic diseases, women show higher rates of medical drug use and illness from both acute conditions, such as respiratory infections, and from nonfatal chronic diseases, such as arthritis and migraine headache.

Page 21: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• Another explanation is that men are more hesitant than women to admit having symptoms and to seek medical care for the symptoms they experience. This difference in responding to symptoms probably reflects sex-role stereotypes; that is, American society encourages men more than women to ignore pain and to be tough and independent.

Page 22: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• However Basbaum et al (2002) has found that males are better at tolerating pain than females because of a key difference in how the sexes transmit pain messages. A protein called GIRK2 plays a major role in pain sensation and drug sensitivity in males, but is not as important in females.

Page 23: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Use of health services

• Removing GIRK2 means the sexes become equal in their ability to withstand pain, experiments on mice showed.

Page 24: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Diet• Robinson and Killen (1995) found that

adolescent boys of all ethnic groups (Hispanics, Asian Americans, African Americans, and Whites) ate significantly more high-fat foods than did adolescent girls. A num ber of environmental factors may differentially influence male and female eating behaviors, such as gender role stereotypes and their relationship to dietary behaviors.

Page 25: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Diet• For example, Perry et al. (1987)

found that a program design that emphasized weight and physical appearance as secondary benefits of healthy eating was more relevant for adolescent girls (compared with boys).

Page 26: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Diet• They suggested that involvement of boys

might be enhanced by incorporating male sports role models and increasing emphasis on improved strength, endurance, and performance as a result of healthy eating habits. Similarly, Ku manyika and Charleston (1992) found that females were much more likely to volunteer for their church-based weight-loss program than males.

Page 27: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Diet• These studies suggest that

additional research is needed to better understand how genetic and environmental factors may differentially affect male versus female adolescent eating behaviors.

Page 28: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Cancer

Page 29: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Cancer

• Blaxter (1990) found women were more likely to define health in terms of personal relationships. In their study of working-class women’s views of cancer, Murray and McMillan (1988) also found that the women made repeated reference to their families when describing the disease.

Page 30: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Cancer

• For them, health and illness were not simply characteristics of their individual body but rather involved their relationships with others.

Page 31: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Condom use

• Campbell et al. (1992) investigated attitudes towards condom use. Participants were 393 unmarried, heterosexual American undergraduates. The questionnaire consisted of twenty items, which assessed comfort and convenience, protective effectiveness, interpersonal aspects and sexual sensation.

Page 32: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Condom use

• The results showed that women had more positive attitudes towards condoms. Men were concerned about the effects of condoms on sexual sensation. Women worried more about getting a sexually transmitted disease from a new partner.

Page 33: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Condom use

• For women, past condom use was best predicted by positive general attitudes towards condoms as well as less negative attitudes towards the effects of condom use on sexual sensation. For men, feeling positive about the interpersonal aspects of condom use as well as having positive general attitudes towards condoms were significant predictors of past condom use.

Page 34: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Condom use

• For both women and men, intended condom use in the future was best predicted by positive general attitudes towards condoms and positive views about the interpersonal aspects of condom use. In addition, those students who had had fewer sexual partners were more likely to say that they would use a condom in the future.

Page 35: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Condom use

• For women only, increased worry about contracting a sexually transmitted disease also predicted intention to use condoms in the future.

Page 36: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise

• Murray and Jarrett (1985) examined gender differences in perceptions of health and health maintenance. They conducted detailed interviews with a sample of young people and found that young men were more likely to define health in terms of fitness and health maintenance in terms of physical activity, which improved their ability to perform.

Page 37: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise

• Young women preferred diet and weight control which improved their physical image. Other studies (e.g. Hayes and Ross, 1987) have found that concern for bodily appearance is the most important reason for physical activity among females. However, this concern with bodily image is closely linked with social position.

Page 38: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise

• In their survey Oygard and Anderssen found that level of education was positively associated with extent of participation in physical activity among females but not among males.

Page 39: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise

• In reviewing this finding, they refer to the suggestion that concern with the body is more common among those belonging to the cultural elite who are more anxious about their appearance and their ‘body for others’ (Bourdieu, 1984, p. 213).

Page 40: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise

• Oygard and Anderssen concluded: ‘For females in higher social positions, it may be of importance to show others who they are by developing healthy and “delicate” bodies, i.e. they are more concerned with the inner (being healthy) and outer body (being attractive) than females in lower social positions’ (1998, p. 65).

Page 41: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Exercise• However, they also added that the lesser

involvement of less educated females may be due to them having limited access to leisure facilities. They found little relationship between education and physical activity among males and suggest that this may reflect the greater promotion of male sporting activities and the greater integration of physical activity into male culture.

Page 42: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Graham (1996) considered the sex differences in the prevalence of smoking across Europe between 1950 and 1990. During this period there was a consistent decline in the prevalence of smoking among men from about 70—90% to about 30—50%. However, among women the same period saw a rise in the prevalence of smoking followed by a slow decline reaching 20—40% in 1990.

Page 43: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Women from professional backgrounds led the initial rise in prevalence, but they have also led the decline such that today smoking in Britain is more common among women from poorer backgrounds.

Page 44: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• In a detailed qualitative and sociometric study of friendship patterns of a sample of Scottish schoolchildren, Michell and Amos (1997) found evidence that gender differences in the meaning of smoking and how it was inter twined with issues of style and social identity. Girls identified at the top of the pecking order and who projected an image of high self-esteem were more likely to smoke.

Page 45: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• These girls were more often described as ‘good-looking’ and being attractive to boys. They often hung out in the park after school rather than participating in organized activities. These girls did not feel under pressure to smoke. Rather they adopted smoking as part of the image of being cool, rebellious and sophisticated. It was seen as part of the ‘top’ girl package.

Page 46: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• One 11-year-old girl said: ‘You don’t want to be seen as a wee sad people.’ To avoid this image she would wear her short skirt, jewellery and makeup and would smoke.

Page 47: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Admittedly in this study there was a small minority of girls who were low in the pecking order and who smoked. These girls did admit that they had felt bullied or coerced into smoking or that they smoked in order to be like the ‘top’ girls. These girls had poor social skills and low self-esteem. They felt they were not responsible for smoking themselves.

Page 48: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• For ‘top’ boys the desire to smoke was less clear-cut. Michell and Amos (1997) suggested that they occupied an ambivalent position since smoking conflicted with their desire to be fit. Smoking was less important because they had other means, especially sports, of claiming a top position.

Page 49: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• An important although neglected aspect of this study is the broader socio-cultural context within which the young people lived. The two schools investigated in this study had a varied catchment area, which included private and public housing.

Page 50: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• However, the fact that 50% of the students were receiving free school meals, the Glasgow average, would suggest that a large proportion came from lower SES backgrounds. It is not simply that all ‘top’ girls smoked but rather those within a particular subculture did.

Page 51: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Wearing et al. (1994) in their review have drawn attention to the importance of the socio-cultural context. They refer to an American study by Lesko (1988), which identified two subcultures in a school she studied. There were the ‘rich and popular’ girls who were fashionably and expensively dressed and fitted with the classic ‘good girl’ image.

Page 52: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Conversely, there were the ‘burn outs’ who challenged school discipline and enjoyed ‘hanging out’. This latter group of girls smoked.

Page 53: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• In commenting on this study Wearing et al. (1994) note: ‘Smoking . . . for the “burn outs” is a leisure activity which symbolizes resistance to the passive, sweet tempered, modest, restrained, domestic identity associated with traditional female identity and which for the “rich and popular” girls is being constructed in adolescence through school and leisure’ (p. 632).

Page 54: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Smoking in girls has also been explained in terms of controlling weight. Adolescence is the period when girls become particularly aware of society’s emphasis on body size. Teenage girls are particularly concerned about being over weight. Smoking would seem to be one strategy used to control weight gain.

Page 55: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Charlton (1984) in a large survey of British teenagers found that girls were much more likely to agree that smoking controlled weight. In a survey of a large sample of US students in seven to ten grades (11—15 years old), French et al. (1994) found a strong association between various measures of dieting and smoking among girls but not among boys.

Page 56: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Girls who reported symptoms of eating disorder, had tried to lose weight, feared weight gain or reported a strong desire to remain thin were more likely to report smoking. In the USA there is evidence that this belief is particularly pronounced among white girls.

Page 57: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking

• Heckler (1985) found that obesity is more acceptable in black culture and Camp et al. (1993) found in a survey of teenagers that white girls more frequently agreed that smoking helps control body weight.

Page 58: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking• The character of social activities enjoyed

by teenage boys and girls needs also to be considered. While boys often remain involved in sport and other organised activities, girls become more involved in less organised activities. In a survey of English teenagers (Murray et al., 1983; Swan et al., 1990) it was found that smoking was more common among girls who got involved in such activities.

Page 59: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Smoking• Smoking for these girls had a

variety of positive social meanings including affirming social bonds with their peers, asserting their adult status and regulating time.

Page 60: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

Homework

a) Outline one lifestyle characteristic that influences health behaviour. (6)

b) Evaluate how much lifestyle affects a person’s health. (10)

Page 61: Gender differences Health Psychology. Gender and Health Men have a lower life expectancy than women: 75.1 years compared with 80.0 years (D0H, 2001 b)

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