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. 1992 Jun;42(359):236–240.

Social indicators of health needs for general practice: a simpler approach.

J L Hopton 1, J G Howie 1, A M Porter 1
PMCID: PMC1372059  PMID: 1419245

Abstract

The ability of different measures of socioeconomic position to predict distress in a sample of general practice attenders has been examined. Perceived distress was measured using the Nottingham health profile. The measures of socioeconomic position included: social class, Jarman scores of patients' areas of residence, whether or not patients owned their own home, whether or not patients owned a car, whether or not they had been unemployed during the previous year and whether or not they had had further education. Social class data were only available for 84% of the 1075 respondents completing the Nottingham health profile. Those respondents for whom social class data were not available were significantly more likely to score positively on the social isolation, sleep and physical mobility dimensions of the Nottingham health profile. Not owning one's own home emerged as the measure of socioeconomic status that best predicted distress. The other measures of socioeconomic status that were significantly predictive of distress were not having had further education and having been unemployed during the last year. Different measures of socioeconomic position significantly predicted positive scores on different dimension of the Nottingham health profile. Although the Jarman score significantly predicted a positive score on the sleep dimension, it did not predict distress well when compared with the direct measures of disadvantage. There are simple, more direct measures of socioeconomic position than social class that could be collected routinely by practices which would form a better basis for the evaluation of services required to target those needs created by persisting social inequalities in health.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

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Selected References

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