Socioeconomic Gender Variables Impact the Association between Hypertension and Chronic Health Issues: Cross-Sectional Study
Simon David Lindner, Teresa Gisinger, Peter Klimek, Alexandra Kautzky-Willer

TL;DR
This study shows that gender and socioeconomic factors affect how hypertension relates to health issues differently in men and women.
Contribution
The study introduces a novel approach to analyzing how gender and socioeconomic variables influence hypertension-related comorbidities.
Findings
Hypertension in both sexes is linked to lower education, unemployment, and lower income.
In females, being married/common-law or divorced/widowed increases hypertension risk.
Working and higher education in females are associated with specific comorbidities like myocardial infarction and arthrosis.
Abstract
Our aim is to investigate if sex and gender influence the association of hypertension and their comorbidities. We investigated how gender differences in five socioeconomic factors impact the relation between hypertension and ten comorbidities including diabetes mellitus, renal disease, and chronic pulmonary disease in European countries grouped by their gender inequality index using representative survey data from the European Health Interview Survey. Using logistic regressions, we compute the ratio of odds ratios in females versus males. Therefore, an ORR > 1 is associated with a higher odds ratio for females than for males while an ORR < 1 means the opposite. To account for multiple hypothesis testing, we applied the Bonferroni correction. Hypertension in both sexes was associated with lower educational level, being unemployed, and lower income. In males, being divorced/widowed…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBlood Pressure and Hypertension Studies · Health and Wellbeing Research · Health disparities and outcomes
