4.2 Article

Why do men get more heart disease than women? An international perspective

Journal

JOURNAL OF AMERICAN COLLEGE HEALTH
Volume 48, Issue 6, Pages 291-294

Publisher

HELDREF PUBLICATIONS
DOI: 10.1080/07448480009596270

Keywords

gender; heart disease; psychosocial factors

Funding

  1. PHS HHS [467 MZ000831] Funding Source: Medline

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Biological, behavioral, and psychosocial contributions to the gender gap in coronary heart disease (CHD) are discussed. Although CHD is the Number 1 cause of death for both sexes in the industrialized world, CHD mortality rates between these countries are larger than those between men and women, suggesting that biological factors are not the sole influences on the gender gap in CHD. Traditional coronary risk factors cannot explain the rapid increase in CHD mortality among middle-aged men in many of the newly independent states of eastern Europe. However, eastern European men score higher on stress-related psychosocial coronary risk factors (eg, social isolation, vital exhaustion) than men living in the West. Comparisons between the sexes also reveal gender differences in psychosocial and behavioral coronary risk factors, including excessive alcohol consumption and smoking, favoring women. Overall, it appears that men's coping with stressful events may be less adaptive physiologically, behaviorally, and emotionally, contributing to their increased risk for CHD.

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