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Sökning: WFRF:(Kristenson Margareta Professor 1950 )

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1.
  • Granström, Fredrik (författare)
  • Inequalities in Health : the Importance of Material/Structural Factors and Psychosocial Resources
  • 2021
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Socioeconomic inequalities in health are well-documented in most countries. Health differences have been shown to follow a gradient, where health status in average is somewhat poorer for every lower level in the social hierarchy. Notably, the welfare state Sweden is no exception. Considerable socioeconomic inequalities in health are found, and the magnitude of e.g. educational inequalities in health has even increased over recent decades. Important contributors, or “health determinants” of observed health inequalities, include material/structural factors, behavioral factors and psychosocial factors. The inequalities arise from uneven distributions of these health determinants accumulated over the life course. Whereas earlier research has focused on independent effects of different determinants, recent research has showed that health determinants interact in complex ways when contributing to health inequalities. However, the relative importance of the independent contributions of specific types of health determinants and of the shared contributions have not been assessed. The overall aim of this thesis was to examine possible explanations of inequalities in self-reported health among groups with different educational levels in a Swedish population, in particular how material/structural factors and psychosocial resources contribute to these inequalities. This thesis is based on four population-based studies. Studies I and IV used data from the Life & health study, based on crosssectional survey questionnaires, conducted in 2000, 2004 and 2008 in five counties in the central part of Sweden. Around 35,000 respondents were included each year with response rates varying from 60% to 67%. Studies II and III used data from a sub-sample of the Swedish national public health survey (HLV) from 2012, another cross-sectional survey questionnaire. The sub-sample was carried out in four counties in the central part of Sweden. The total number of respondents in the sub-sample was 26,706, with a response rate of 53%. Outcome variables were, in studies I, II and IV, self-rated health (SRH) and, in study III, psychological distress. The magnitudes of health inequalities were examined using rate ratios and rate differences. The associations between health determinants and health out-comes were examined using logistic regression, and the analysis of independent versus shared contributions of health determinants to health inequalities was conducted using structural equation modeling (SEM). Study I showed that relative educational inequalities in SRH were two-fold among men, unchanged from 2000 to 2008, while the inequalities initially were smaller among women but increased over time, from 1.7 to 2.1. This increase was mainly due to growing inequalities in the age group 25–34 years. The distributions of all observed health determinants were more unfavorable in low education groups; most prominent for lack of a financial buffer, smoking and low optimism. These educational differences were, for most health determinants, unchanged over time. Study II examined the association of adult SRH with adverse material conditions (eco-nomic stress in the family) in childhood as well as adverse psychosocial conditions (condescending treatment) in childhood. Both economic stress and condescending treatment in childhood were strongly associated with poorer adult SRH. These associations were attenuated, but still statistically significant after adjustment for economic stress and condescending treatment in adulthood and other risk factors. Study III showed, after adjustment for age, economic difficulties, employment status and social support, a moderate association between educational level and psychological dis-tress, where low and medium educational levels were related to a lower risk of psychological distress. However, current economic difficulties showed a strong, and positive, association with psychological distress. Study IV showed that the shared pathways, including both material/structural fac-tors (e.g. financial buffer and unemployment) and psychosocial resources (e.g. optimism and social participation), explained about 40% of educational inequalities in SRH for both men and women aged 25–74 years. The pathways including only the independent effects of psychosocial resources (14% in men and 20% in women) or material/structural factors (9% and 18%, respectively) explained substantial but smaller proportions of the inequalities. In conclusion, in an adult population in the central part of Sweden, prevalence of poor SRH was, among men, twice as high in the low education group compared to the high education group during the first decade of the new millennium. Among women, educational inequalities were initially smaller, but increased over time to the same level as among men. However, when using self-reported psychological distress as health outcome, no corresponding educational inequalities were found. Instead, economic difficulties were an important determinant of psychological distress. SRH in adulthood was significantly associated with economic stress and condescending treatment during childhood, also when the same conditions in adulthood were taken into account. Material/structural factors and psychosocial resources explained more than half of the educational inequalities in SRH, and the majority of this contribution was in the form of a shared effect of material/structural factors and psychosocial resources. A shared effect means that a material/structural factor and a psychosocial resource are strongly associated, and that the combination of the two has an effect on the educational inequalities in SRH. Therefore, to reduce educational inequalities in SRH, interventions need to address both material/structural conditions and psychosocial resources. This needs to be done across educational groups, using a life course perspective, but with more intensive interventions in lower education groups. 
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2.
  • Dyar, Oliver J., et al. (författare)
  • Rainbows over the world's public health : determinants of health models in the past, present, and future
  • 2022
  • Ingår i: Scandinavian Journal of Public Health. - : Sage Publications. - 1403-4948 .- 1651-1905. ; 50:7, s. 1047-1058
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • The need to visualise the complexity of the determinants of population health and their interactions inspired the development of the rainbow model. In this commentary we chronicle how variations of this model have emerged, including the initial models of Haglund and Svanström (1982), Dahlgren and Whitehead (1991), and the Östgöta model (2014), and we illustrate how these models have been influential in both public health and beyond. All these models have strong Nordic connections and are thus an important Nordic contribution to public health. Further, these models have underpinned and facilitated other examples of Nordic leadership in public health, including practical efforts to address health inequalities and design new health policy approaches.Apart from documenting the emergence of rainbow models and their wide range of contemporary uses, we examine a range of criticisms levelled at these models – including limitations in methodological development and in scope. We propose the time is ripe for an updated generic determinants of health model, one that elucidates and preserves the core value in older models, while recognising the developments that have occurred over the past decades in our understanding of the determinants of health. We conclude with an example of a generic model that fulfills the general purposes of a determinants of health model while maintaining the necessary scope for further adjustments to be made in the future, as well as adjustments to location or context-specific purposes, in education, research, health promotion and beyond.
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3.
  • Kristenson, Margareta, 1950- (författare)
  • The LiVcordia Study : Possible causes for the differences in coronary heart disease mortality between Lithuania and Sweden
  • 1998
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • Background: In recent decades coronary heart disease (CHD) mortality has declined in Western Europe and increased in Central and Eastern Europe. A large difference in CHD mortality has developed and the causes are not known. Lithuania and Sweden had similar CHD mortality rates for middle-aged men twenty years ago but in 1994 this mortality was four times higher in Lithuania than in Sweden. Also within countries CHD mortality is higher in low socioeconomic groups.Aim of the study: The LiVicordia (Linköping-Vilnius-coronary-artery-disease-risk-assessment) study aimed at identifying possible explanations for the different CHD mortality rates in the two countries.Method: This cross-sectional study concomitantly compared 150 randomly sampled 50-year-old men in each of the cities Vilnius, Lithuania and Linköping, Sweden from October 1993 nntil March 1995 using identical, standardised methodology. Investigations included a broad range of traditional and psychosocial risk factors for CHD, measures of oxidative stress, a standardised laboratory stress test and ultrasound measures of Peripheral atherosclerosis.Results: The differences found in traditional risk factors for CHD were small. Systolic blood pressure (SBP) was higher in Vilnius men, smoking was similar and plasma LDL cholesterol levels higher in Linköping men. Lower serum levels of the lipid soluble antioxidant vitamins carotene, lycopene and ytocopherol were found in Vilnius men, and also a higher susceptibility of LDL to oxidation in vitro. An unfavourable pattern of psychosocial risk factors for CHD: job strain, social isolation, depression and vital exhaustion characterised Vilnins men, who also showed an attenuated cortisol response to the laboratory stress test. This stress response has earlier been shown in states of chronic stress; loss of dynamic capacity to respond to new demands may be a predisposing factor for disease. Vilnius men had more peripheral atherosclerosis; thicker intima media, more and larger plaques and greater stiffness. Measures of atherosclerosis related to SBP, smoking, LDL cholesterol arrl P-carotene. The same unfavourable profile of risk factors for CHD, which characterised Vilnius men, was also found in underprivileged groups withip the cities. There were few differences in traditional risk factors.Conclusions: Thus, based on our survey on risk factors for CHD, it can be stated that traditional risk factors seem not to explain the different CHD mortality rates between Lithuania and Sweden. Possible alternative explanations are psychosocial strain and oxidative stress. These factors were also found among men in underprivileged groups within the cities. Therfore the influence of the risk factors studied may be relevant also for socioeconomic inequalities in CHD mortality within countries.
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4.
  • Lundgren, Oskar, 1979- (författare)
  • Psychological Resources and Risk Factors in Coronary Heart Disease : Assessment, Impact and the Influence of Mindfulness Training
  • 2018
  • Doktorsavhandling (övrigt vetenskapligt/konstnärligt)abstract
    • There is strong evidence for the observation that psychological risk factors, such as depressive symptoms, hopelessness, and anxiety are associated with higher risk of developing coronary heart disease (CHD), and also contribute to a worse prognosis among CHD patients. Much less is known about psychological resources, such as Mastery, and their role in cardiovascular medicine. Although the current state of science about the importance of psychological factors has advanced during the last decades, the mental health status of patients is often neglected in clinical practice. The reason behind this gap is multifaceted, including unawareness of the current state of science among professionals and a lack of clear guideline, which in turn, results from a lack of evidence-based ways to address the issues. Furthermore, the measurement of psychological resources is complex and a debated topic in psychology. The aim of this thesis was to investigate: 1) If the use of inverted items in three questionnaires that measure psychological resources and risk factors represent a validity risk in the context of CHD. 2) If psychological resources and risk factors are independently associated with incidence in CHD. 3) If an eight-week course in Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction (MBSR) is a feasible psychological intervention, as an addition to cardiac rehabilitation. 4) How CHD patients experience the practices of mindfulness and yoga in MBSR.In Study I and II, data from 1007 participants randomly selected from a Swedish community sample, aged 45-69 at baseline (50 % women), were analysed. To study the validity of the self-report instruments Mastery, Self-esteem and Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale (CESD), subscales with only positive and negative items were created. The new subscales were evaluated against three criterion measures; cross-sectional against each other and the circulatory marker of inflammation interleukine-6 (IL-6) (concurrent construct validity); prospectively against 8-year incidence in CHD (predictive validity), and in addition, a factor analysis was used to investigate construct dimensionality. The instruments seemed to be valid measures of psychological resources and risk factors in the context of CHD risk. The new subscales showed the same associations as the original scales, except for the positive items in CES-D. However, this did not have a major influence on the full scale. In Study II a prospective analysis of the impact of psychological factors on 8-year incidence in CHD was performed. The psychological resources Mastery and Self-esteem were negatively associated with CHD, also after adjustment for nine traditional cardiovascular risk factors in Cox proportional hazard models. The protective effect of the two resources, and the increased risk of Hopelessness, remained after adjustment for depressive symptoms. In Study III and IV, a group of CHD patients with depressive symptoms (n=79) was invited to participate in MBSR as a complement to cardiac rehabilitation. Twenty-four patients started MBSR and 16 completed it. The results were compared with a reference group (n=108) of patients from the same clinic, which showed stability in psychological variables over 12 months. MBSR was appreciated by the patients and improvements in psychological risk factors (e.g., depressive symptoms), and an increase in Mastery were observed. Study IV made use of a qualitative content analysis of diary entries written by patients immediately after practice sessions throughout MBSR. Participants described difficulties, both physical and psychological, during the whole course, but as the weeks passed they more frequently described an enhanced ability to concentrate, relax and deal with distractions. From the combined findings in Study III and IV, we conclude that MBSR could be a promising complement to cardiac rehabilitation for a selection of patients.The overall picture, emerging from this thesis, strengthens the argument that psychological factors should be recognized and addressed in clinical practice. It also encourages further studies of how psychological resources could be built, which could inform the development of effective prevention and treatment strategies for CHD patients with psychological distress and also contribute to improved public health interventions.
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5.
  • Sundström, Johan, Professor, 1971-, et al. (författare)
  • Rationale for a Swedish cohort consortium
  • 2019
  • Ingår i: Upsala Journal of Medical Sciences. - : Taylor & Francis Group. - 0300-9734 .- 2000-1967. ; 124:1, s. 21-28
  • Tidskriftsartikel (refereegranskat)abstract
    • We herein outline the rationale for a Swedish cohort consortium, aiming to facilitate greater use of Swedish cohorts for world-class research. Coordination of all Swedish prospective population-based cohorts in a common infrastructure would enable more precise research findings and facilitate research on rare exposures and outcomes, leading to better utilization of study participants' data, better return of funders' investments, and higher benefit to patients and populations. We motivate the proposed infrastructure partly by lessons learned from a pilot study encompassing data from 21 cohorts. We envisage a standing Swedish cohort consortium that would drive development of epidemiological research methods and strengthen the Swedish as well as international epidemiological competence, community, and competitiveness.
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