Abstract

BackgroundPoor self-rated health (SRH) is associated with increased mortality. However, most studies only adjust for few health risk factors and/or do not analyse whether this association is consistent also for intermediate categories of SRH and for follow-up periods exceeding 5–10 years. This study examined whether the SRH-mortality association remained significant 30 years after assessment when adjusting for a wide range of known clinical, behavioural and socio-demographic risk factors.MethodsWe followed-up 8,251 men and women aged ≥16 years who participated 1977–79 in a community based health study and were anonymously linked with the Swiss National Cohort (SNC) until the end of 2008. Covariates were measured at baseline and included education, marital status, smoking, medical history, medication, blood glucose and pressure.Results92.8% of the original study participants could be linked to a census, mortality or emigration record of the SNC. Loss to follow-up 1980–2000 was 5.8%. Even after 30 years of follow-up and after adjustment for all covariates, the association between SRH and all-cause mortality remained strong and estimates almost linearly increased from “excellent” (reference: hazard ratio, HR 1) to “good” (men: HR 1.07 95% confidence interval 0.92–1.24, women: 1.22, 1.01–1.46) to “fair” (1.41, 1.18–1.68; 1.39, 1.14–1.70) to “poor”(1.61, 1.15–2.25; 1.49, 1.07–2.06) to “very poor” (2.85, 1.25–6.51; 1.30, 0.18–9.35). Persons answering the SRH question with “don't know” (1.87, 1.21–2.88; 1.26, 0.87–1.83) had also an increased mortality risk; this was pronounced in men and in the first years of follow-up.ConclusionsSRH is a strong and “dose-dependent” predictor of mortality. The association was largely independent from covariates and remained significant after decades. This suggests that SRH provides relevant and sustained health information beyond classical risk factors or medical history and reflects salutogenetic rather than pathogenetic pathways.

Highlights

  • Poor self-rated health (SRH) is associated with increased mortality

  • For this purpose we restricted for this table to the National Research Program 1A (NRP 1A) official age range and excluded 288 participants exceeding the upper age limit at baseline

  • We analysed to what extent the association between global SRH and all-cause mortality was influenced by socio-demographic, behavioural and clinical variables and examined the impact of the time passed between assessment and outcome

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Summary

Methods

We followed-up 8,251 men and women aged $16 years who participated 1977–79 in a community based health study and were anonymously linked with the Swiss National Cohort (SNC) until the end of 2008. National Research Program 1A (NRP 1A) data The NRP 1A was a community health promotion initiative focused on cardiovascular disease prevention [11]. It has been conducted 1977–1979 in five towns (Table 1) of Switzerland. Encouraged by the success of a recently conducted anonymous record linkage of participants data from another study [13], we adopted the procedure to NRP 1A, using date of birth, sex, marital status and geographical information from census, mortality and migration registries. To ensure the comparability of different models via these information criteria and the comparability of their results, persons with missing values in the relevant variables were excluded before conducting the analyses

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