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  • Title: [Study based on the WHO Monika program on the connection between psychosocial risk factors and ischemic heart disease in men aged 25-64 in Novosibirsk].
    Author: Gafarov VV, Pak VA, Gagulin IV, Gafarova AV.
    Journal: Ter Arkh; 2003; 75(4):51-4. PubMed ID: 12793139.
    Abstract:
    AIM: To study correlations between coronary heart disease (CHD) and psychosocial risk factors. MATERIAL AND METHODS: CHD affected more frequently workers engaged in hard physical labour, in poorly educated persons; the least CHD morbidity was recorded in managers and highly educated persons. CHD males think of their health much worse than males free of CHD. The former smoked much more before CHD diagnosis, but when CHD comes they quit and reduce smoking much more frequently. This fact explains why smokers are encountered among CHD patients two times less frequently than in CHD-free males. In spite of stronger motivation for adequate diet, CHD males changed their nutrition pattern only in 3.7%. CHD males sleep worse: good sleep was registered in CHD-free males two times more frequently. Psychological risk factors such as personal anxiety, sleep disorders were reported much more frequently in CHD patients proving the fact of social stress involvement in development of CHD. So-called coronary behavior was observed in both groups of males with the same rate. Thus, the coronary behavior is not associated with CHD. CONCLUSION: Development of CHD is associated not with the behavior but its components (depression, anxiety, etc.).
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