Abstract

BackgroundSelf-rated health (SRH), a subjective assessment of health status, is extensively used in the public health field. However, whether SRH can reflect the objective health status is still debatable. We aim to reveal the relationship between SRH and objective health status in the general population.MethodsWe assessed the relationship between SRH and objective health status by examining the prevalence of diseases, laboratory parameters, and some health-related factors in different SRH groups. Data were collected from 18,000 residents randomly sampled from the general population in five cities of China (3,600 in each city). SRH was assessed by a single-item health measure with five options: “very good,” “good,” “fair,” “bad,” and “very bad.” The differences in prevalence of diseases, laboratory parameters, and health-related factors between the “healthy” (very good plus good), “relatively healthy” (fair), and “unhealthy” (bad plus very bad) groups were examined. The odds ratios (ORs) referenced by the healthy group were calculated using logistic regression analysis.ResultsThe prevalence of all diseases was associated with poorer SRH. The tendency was more prominent in cardio-cerebral vascular diseases, visual impairment, and mental illnesses with larger ORs. Residents with abnormalities in laboratory parameters tended to have poorer SRH, with ORs ranging from 1.62 (for triglyceride) to 3.48 (for hemoglobin among men) in a comparison of the unhealthy and healthy groups. Most of the health-related factors regarded as risks were associated with poorer SRH. Among them, life and work pressure, poor spiritual status, and poor quality of interpersonal relationships were the most significant factors.ConclusionsSRH is consistent with objective health status and can serve as a global measure of health status in the general population.

Highlights

  • Self-rated health (SRH), a subjective assessment of health status, is extensively used in the public health field

  • This study examined the association between SRH and objective health status through a comprehensive collection of data on disease prevalence, laboratory parameters, and health-related factors in a randomly selected sample from five cities of China: Shanghai, Beijing, Xi’an, Wuhan and Guangzhou

  • Abnormalities in laboratory parameters by SRH status adjusted for gender, age, marital status, educational level, current work, family income, current smoking, current drinking, and frequency

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Summary

Introduction

Self-rated health (SRH), a subjective assessment of health status, is extensively used in the public health field. Self-rated health (SRH) ( known as self-assessed health or self-perceived health) refers to a single-item health measure in which individuals rate the current status of their own health on a four- or five-point scale from excellent to poor. It is popular for its simplicity and has been extensively studied in Western populations. SRH is a subjective reflection of health status, called “perceived” or “subjective” health. It has been widely studied in survey research [3,7,8]. Some health-related factors, such as demographic characteristics, health history, life habit, life stress and work strain, are closely associated with objective health

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