Title: Lifespan, Gender
1Lifespan, Gender CultureWomens Health (1)
P.corcoran_at_city.ac.uk
2Womens Health -Outline
- Womens health in context
- Lifestyle factors and health
- Life threatening illness- Aids
- Responses to life cycle challenges
- Health promotion and disease prevention
3Improvements in Life Expectancy
- 1900 average life expectancy 48
- 1997 average life expectancy 79
- Western society has witnessed enormous changes
in womens roles, economic and educational
opportunities and health care status.
4Factors related to improvements in Life Expectancy
- Less deaths in childbirth
- Birth control and medical improvements in general
- More involvement in health care settings and
decision making - Political changes.e.g 1975- International Womens
Year - UN General Assembly - More research into womens health
5Issues in Womens Health
- Women live longer than men, therefore more
susceptible to disease in later life - Women suffer from more ill-health than men
- Under stress combining work and family life
- Certain health problems are more prevalent in
women (e.g. STDs) - Certain health problems are more particular to
women (e.g. Breast cancer)
6- For women, coronary hearth disease, stroke, lung
cancer, and breast cancer are the leading causes
of death and disability. - (Wenger, Speroff and Packard, 1993)
- Many of the risk factors identified for these
diseases are a function of health behaviours
acting in concert with genetic and environmental
factors. - (Luepker, 1994)
7Women from different ethnic and socio-economic
backgrounds bring different life histories,
cultural and health beliefs and practices, and
concerns to the health care setting.
- Moreover, they bring different experiences of
situational stress and resources for coping with
these stressors. For example, results from a
recent study (Krieger Sidney, 1996) indicated
that racial discrimination shapes patterns of
blood pressure among the U.S. Black population
and differences in Black-White blood pressure.
8Social factor
- Socioeconomic status (SES) and breast cancer.
- breast cancer is higher among higher SES women
- lower SES women are more likely to die from
breast cancer
9SES and Age
- Wagener and Schatzkin (1994)
- mortality rates dropped for women aged 25-44
years, declines greater for women in more
affluent regions - women aged 45-64 - mortality rates decreased over
time in affluent regions, increased in poor
regions - all women over the age of 65- mortality increased
, increase sharper for women in poorer regions
10Social Factor
- Violence
- 1985, US Surgeon General stated that the number
one health problem facing women was violence - in one community practice in US, 23 of women
seeking medical care had been assaulted by their
partner. Neither demographic nor health factors
could accurately predict who among these females
had been assaulted (Hamberger et al, 1992)
11Psychosocial factors
- e.g. Social networks
- the relation of social support to health is
weaker and more complex among women than men - Shumaker and Hill (1991) noted a mortality
disadvantge for women with social support
12Psychosocial factors
- e.g. Marriage
- women derive fewer physical and mental health
benefits from marriage than men - women recover more quickly and suffer less
adverse health consequences from widowhood than
men
13Psychosocial factors
- e.g. religiosity
- Clark, Friedman Martin (99) - women who viewed
themselves as more religious in adulthood had a
lower risk of premature mortality than those who
were less religiously inclined - Alferi (99) - Catholic women with breast cancer,
the more religious the more distress they showed
whereas the opposite was true for evangelical
women
14Lifestyle factors and health
- Alcohol
- Smoking
- Diet
- Stress
- Physical activity
- Sexual behaviour
15Diet
- 1992- 40 of women were overweight in England
- 55 chose underweight body image as ideal body
- Doll Peto(81) - approx 35 of all cancer
deaths can be attributed to diet (cf tobacco -
30) - Meat consumption and alcohol increases the risk
of some cancers - Vegetables and fruit are protective for almost
all cancers
16Eating disorders- Anorexia Nervosa (AN)
- most life threatening eating disorder
- 90 of cases female
- course and prognosis is poor
- approx 40 recover after treatment
- lack of research into ethnic minorities and AN
17Eating disorders - Bulimia Nervosa
- 90 of cases female
- females born after 1960 have an increased risk
- results of treatment variable, CBT shown good
results - recovery ranges from 13 -71
- relapse rates are high
- (Olmsted, Kaplan Rockert, 1994)
18Eating disorders- Binge eating disorder
- new eating disorder (DSM-IV, 1994)
- largest eating disorder group
- recurrent episodes of binge eating without
purging or fasting - approx 50 of people with BED - obese
- only slightly more common in women than men
- black and white women are at equal risk
19Factors associated with eating disorders
- depression
- low self-esteem
- anxiety and stress
-
- problems with expression of negative affect in
families - problems with conflict management in the family
- public self-consciousness
-
- dieting at a young age
20Contextual factor associated with eating disorders
- - media ?
- The media provide particular examples of role
expectations and images of beauty which may
influence young peoples perceptions of
acceptable body imageThe images of slim models
in the media are a stark contrast to the body
size and shape of most children and young women
who are becoming heavier. Research has found
that most female characters on television are
thinner than average women. - BMA, 2000
21Contextual factor associated with eating disorders
- Socialization
- Being female means that how one looks is more
important than what one does - Discontent about body is the norm for women.
- p125 C.Lee.
22Eating disorders - barriers to treatment
- feelings of shame and self-loathing
- fear of weight gain
- feeling that the eating disorder will go away on
its own - lack of knowledge about appropriate referrals
23Women and Aids
- In the UK, the prevalence of Aids/HIV has nearly
doubled over the last century - June 2000- 17,998 Males and 5,063 Females
reported to be HIV infected - Leading cause of death for women in certain areas
of Africa - 4 times more cases in France
24Women and Aids
- Transmission (Sherr, 1996)
- Risk of transmission after a single unprotected
act of heterosexual intercourse with an HIV
positive woman 20 times less likely than is
transmission from an HIV positive man to a woman - Second most common transmission category for
women with AIDS is heterosexual contact (source
US) - 19-32 of women whose male partners report
bisexuality(source UK)
25Women and Aids
- Psychological impact of HIV in women
- very few studies have examined this
systematically - most studies looked at the psychological impact
of gay men - women may differ from gay men in the nature of
their social support, their roles within the
family, their childrearing situation, roles
within sexual relationships, their goals,
opportunities, hurdles and aspirations - contemporary discourse about sexual choice
implies a freedom which may not be available to
women
26Women and Aids
- Psychological impact of HIV
- anxiety
- depression
- lowered self image (weight loss, Kaposis
sarcoma, hair loss) - loneliness (changes in sexual behaviour lost
avenue to new relationship formation) - fear
- dementia
27Women and Aids
- A gender analysis, Sherr, (1996)
- women are less likely to leave their partner if
he becomes HIV positive - Alternative explanation This is due to
commitment - women are less likely to withhold knowledge of
their HIV status from their male partner - Alternative explanation This is due to honesty.
28Women and Aids
- A gender analysis, Sherr, (1996)
- women are less likely to be exposed to
unprotected sex from an HIV positive male partner
than the other way around - Alternative explanation This is due to male
disregard - women are less likely to be tested for HIV
without consent - Alternative explanation This is due to
discrimination
29Conclusions
- Despite the many improvements in womens health,
many are still possible if we are willing to view
not only the biomedical aspects of health, but
also the social and psychological - Lifestyle factors play a big part in womens
health - Less women are reported to be HIV infected but
are more vulnerable to the virus - A gender analysis of HIV/Aids can reappraise
findings offer less victimising explanations