Annals of Agricultural and Environmental Medicine (Mar 2019)

Place of residence and age as variables differentiating health behaviours and perception of health by women past menopause

  • Anna B. Pilewska-Kozak,
  • Beata Dobrowolska,
  • Grażyna Stadnicka,
  • Bartłomiej Drop,
  • Marian Jędrych

DOI
https://doi.org/10.26444/aaem/102496
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 1
pp. 165 – 173

Abstract

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Introduction Research on the meaning of health and health behaviors is important for the development of health education programmes which should be tailored to the needs of patients. Objective The aim of the study is to determine whether the place of residence and age have an impact on health behaviours and the perception of health by women past menopause. Material and methods A survey method and three research instruments were employed: authors’ questionnaire, the Health Behaviour Inventory and the Health Criteria List by Juczyński, and the Kupperman Index. The study was carried out among a sample of 102 women after menopause hospitalised in a hospital in eastern Poland. Results The overall health behaviour indicator (HBI) in the study group was found to reach an average value of 80.1±12.7points. A higher HBI indicator was found to be characteristic of urban rather than rural residents; however, there was no statistically significant difference (p>0.05). The age of respondents did not differentiate statistically their health behaviours (p>0.05). Women who reported their last menstruation before the age of 50 obtained higher results in the dimension of health practices (HPs) than those whose last menstruation ceased after the age of 50 (p<0.05). The respondents attributed the highest importance to health, understood as a property, a state and a goal. Statistically significant differences were observed in the importance of the statement according to which health is a process of “being able to work without tension and stress”, as the respondents from urban areas assigned to it a higher average weight than those from rural areas (p< 0.05). Conclusions A higher overall HBI, as well as indicators for particular categories, were characteristic of women from urban areas. Age did not significantly differentiate the women’s health behaviours. Rural residents were dominant in the group of women who rated their health to be very good or good. The respondents attributed the highest importance to health understood as a property, state and goal.

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