Chapter 3 Age, Sex, Gender, Race as SDOH Flashcards
Age in Relation to Health
One of the strongest predictors of health and disease
Morality risk: greatest in first few moments after birth, declining through the first year, and gradually begins to increase again.
“J-curve”
Age doesn’t = poor health.
Sex and Gender in Relation to Health
Sex: biological categories of male and female
Gender: social categories of masculine and feminine. Includes social expectations of what a male and female should look like.
“Women get sicker, but men die quicker”
- Men have a higher mortality rate in every age category
- Women are more prone to poor health/chronic diseases.
- Stems from biological differences
Gender Inequality
- Pay inequity
- Employment opportunities (advancement)
- Access to health services
3a. Socioeconomic status, aboriginal status, immigrants,, rural location and sexual orientation impact the social resources that enable men and women access to care.
- These groups are marginalized, face discrimination, socially and politically disempowered which negatively impact health outcomes. - Societal roles (profession)
- Cultural attitudes and values
- Gender selection, education, affordable quality day care.
Influence on Health Outcomes (Women)
Women experience more depression due to sex characteristics, roles, response to stress, increase in chronic illness/ STDs, pregnancy and childbirth complications and assaults.
Influence on Health Outcomes (Men)
Poverty, low education, social isolation, and lack of power can increase risk of depression and these are unequally distributed.
- Men may turn to violence
- Social exclusion
- Suicide
- Reluctant to seek health services
- Avoid seeming weak
Strategies
- Equal opportunity for all
- Different programs that cater to the needs of both men and women.