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1  at different life stages to inequalities in self-rated health.
2  between transition-to-retirement groups and self-rated health.
3  to self-selection such as grip strength and self-rated health.
4 ported outcomes, such as quality of life and self-rated health.
5 s or patients with diabetes or poor/moderate self-rated health.
6  and, to a lesser extent, childcare and good self-rated health.
7 reduce racialized disparities in obesity and self-rated health.
8 8, 1.08-1.29) were associated with declining self-rated health.
9 t, current smoker, loneliness, and poor/fair self-rated health.
10 ake, body-mass index, physical activity, and self-rated health.
11 sumption, moderate exercise, depression, and self-rated health.
12 (subjective) mental well-being and favorable self-rated health.
13 id not differ greatly between studies, or by self-rated health.
14 ronment (median odds ratio = 1.05) and adult self-rated health.
15 ving, a wide range of chronic illnesses, and self-rated health.
16 roup, cardiovascular disease medication, and self-rated health.
17 outcomes except medical care utilization and self-rated health.
18  associated with a lower probability of good self-rated health (-0.05 percentage points per SD of the
19  associated with a lower probability of good self-rated health (-0.09 percentage points; 95% CI: -0.1
20  P<0.001), Energy (1.36 points; P=0.02), and Self-rated Health (1.77 points; P=0.007) but not Health
21 etention duration and several variables: (1) self-rated health, (2) mental illness (Kessler 6-item ps
22 e symptomatology (51%), cognition (39%), and self-rated health (37%) than were age, sex, measures of
23 nificantly higher likelihood of poor or fair self-rated health (49.1% [95% CI, 40.5%-57.6%] vs 30.4%
24 atinx-White disparity in cognition (76%) and self-rated health (75%), but age and physical health cor
25  an outsider in the family, having excellent self-rated health, a later birth cohort, and being male,
26 ined in Cox proportional hazards models were self-rated health, ability to perform instrumental activ
27    In addition to variation in the levels of self-rated health across surveys, striking discrepancies
28 th significantly higher odds of fair or poor self-rated health (adjusted odds ratio [aOR] for knowing
29 -up compared with being housed, fair or poor self-rated health (aHR, 1.64; 95% CI, 1.13-2.40), and di
30 tional disability, cognitive impairment, and self-rated health all predict mortality in the elderly p
31                                              Self-rated health also predicted 1982 and 1992 functiona
32 id, and TGNC representation; and fluctuating self-rated health amid increasing COVID-19 symptomatolog
33 ic disparities in depression, cognition, and self-rated health among older adults.
34 th men to 1.50 (95% CI, 1.46-1.55) for worse self-rated health among people with vs without food inse
35 g insecurity with psychological distress and self-rated health among US adults during the COVID-19 pa
36 ging from 1.03 (95% CI, 1.01-1.06) for worse self-rated health among women compared with men to 1.50
37 being (defined as depression, cognition, and self-rated health) among Black and Hispanic/Latinx adult
38 ; 95% CI, 19.2%-22.6%) reported fair or poor self-rated health and 7392 (36.9%; 28.4% weighted, 95% C
39 ts linking the send-down experience to worse self-rated health and better mental health, respectively
40 ational qualifications; on health, including self-rated health and body mass index; and on risk-takin
41                      The interaction between self-rated health and depression independently and stron
42 VI also affects mortality indirectly through self-rated health and disability.
43  P(Bonf.) < 0.001) for individuals with good self-rated health and favourable health status to HR = 7
44       Compared to individuals with excellent self-rated health and favourable health status, individu
45                                The impact on self-rated health and functional capacity is highest amo
46                                              Self-rated health and functional capacity was measured b
47  education, and those reporting poor or fair self-rated health and functional limitations had higher
48             The cross-classification between self-rated health and health status represents a straigh
49  significantly higher odds of reporting poor self-rated health and impaired functional capacity compa
50  significantly higher odds of reporting poor self-rated health and impaired functional capacity compa
51 e used Cox regression, adjusted for baseline self-rated health and lifestyle factors, to calculate mo
52                MS-PD predictors included low self-rated health and perceptions of local pandemic cont
53                                              Self-rated health and physical inactivity partially acco
54 tional migrants also showed higher levels of self-rated health and physical strength, reflective of p
55 ician knowledge about transgender people and self-rated health and psychological distress among trans
56                           Yoga-CaRe improved self-rated health and return to pre-infarct activities a
57 n was associated with increased odds of poor self-rated health and risk of incident serious health pr
58       The objectives were to analyse general self-rated health and self-reported functional capacity
59          Disutility scores were derived from self-rated health and the numbers of physically unhealth
60 vidual-level data to examine trajectories of self-rated health and their determinants in 38,163 parti
61  P(Bonf.) < 0.001) for individuals with poor self-rated health and unfavourable health status.
62  as smoking, marital/partnership status, and self-rated health and were also present when analyses we
63 uality and low birthweight, life expectancy, self-rated health, and age-specific and cause-specific m
64                Functional status, education, self-rated health, and depression were controlled for.
65 pressive symptoms, prescription medications, self-rated health, and functional status.
66 etween care aligned with patient priorities, self-rated health, and health outcomes, these findings s
67 d to higher SES, higher intelligence, better self-rated health, and longer life.
68  elevated odds of reporting more pain, worse self-rated health, and more depression over time, with m
69  hormone use, severe psychological distress, self-rated health, and participation during the COVID-19
70  of years lived with severe-disability, poor self-rated health, and poor mental health was most consi
71                          Age cohort, gender, self-rated health, and religious service attendance were
72                      Initial medical burden, self-rated health, and subjective social support were si
73  variables, population density of residence, self-rated health, and survey year, adjusted analyses of
74 g, and physician-diagnosed chronic diseases, self-rated health, and survival.
75 in men are age, loose or watery stools, poor self-rated health, and urinary incontinence.
76 or age, history of previous hyperthyroidism, self-rated health, and use of estrogen and thyroid hormo
77 tion with health-related quality of life and self-rated health; and a positive association with the n
78 vs >200% of the federal poverty level), poor self-rated health (aOR, 1.25 [95% CI, 1.01-1.56]), and l
79 le had higher odds of reporting fair or poor self-rated health (aOR, 1.67; 95% CI, 1.31-2.13) and sev
80 nt and large effect with Spanish interviews: Self-rated health appeared much worse when asked before
81 ge, sex, race/ethnicity, education, smoking, self-rated health, arthritis, chronic musculoskeletal pa
82 cing symptoms of GERD, FD or IBS report poor self-rated health as well as impaired functional capacit
83 erience, health-related quality of life, and self-rated health at 6 months (vs baseline).
84  [7.5] years vs 77.6 [6.3] years), had worse self-rated health at baseline (47.1% with fair or poor h
85 income, low educational attainment, and poor self-rated health at the baseline.
86                                         Poor self-rated health at wave 1 was associated with increase
87 vention had a greater rate of improvement in self-rated health (B = 1.68, p < .05) and nutritional st
88 e authors investigated cohort differences in self-rated health between women born in 1935-1944 (prebo
89 tional level) was associated with poor adult self-rated health but not poor mental health.
90 erent factors to social-class differences in self-rated health by adjustment of odds ratios (classes
91 ), but exacerbate Black-white disparities in self-rated health by reducing self-rated health in Black
92 and sex did not correlate with response, but self-rated health, cancer status, and nationality did.
93 oderate for smoking, heavy alcohol use, poor self-rated health, cancer, heart disease, and respirator
94                  Our findings highlight that self-rated health captures additional health-related inf
95                                              Self-rated health, chronic health conditions, and depres
96 ic indices for three traits-body mass index, self-rated health, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
97  contributed to 17.6% and 34.0%, gender gap, self-rated health contributed to 18.8% gap, whereas not
98                                              Self-rated health contributes unique information to epid
99 between low parental education and fair/poor self-rated health declined with advancing age (age 50-64
100 hospitalization, activities of daily living, self-rated health, depression, and cigarette smoking.
101                 Wave IV participant-reported self-rated health, depression, stress, optimism, nicotin
102  income), better mental and physical health (self-rated health, depressive symptoms, chronic disease)
103  age, current employment, visual impairment, self-rated health, diabetes mellitus, history of stroke
104                                              Self-rated health, dichotomized as poor or fair vs excel
105                            Order effects for self-rated health differ by interview language; inferenc
106 between low parental education and fair/poor self-rated health differed across racial/ethnic groups a
107 urs and outcomes, which included depression, self-rated health, drug and alcohol use, cardiovascular
108  changed little after further adjustment for self-rated health, education, prevalent health condition
109       The first approach has been applied to self-rated health (excellent to poor) and the 36-Item Sh
110 medication adherence, depression, cognition, self-rated health, fatigue, care satisfaction, home bloo
111 loneliness, more close relationships, better self-rated health, fewer chronic diseases and impaired a
112    An 8-month dance intervention can improve self-rated health for adolescent girls with internalizin
113 her there is an order effect associated with self-rated health for interviews conducted in English an
114 rs and individual-level health outcomes (ie, self-rated health, frequent mental distress, lacking ins
115 ubjective financial status, better childhood self-rated health, frequent religious service attendance
116 g higher subjective financial status, better self-rated health, frequent religious service attendance
117  linear decline (-0.61 per year, p<0.001) in self-rated health from mean ages 31-59 years combined, w
118 onclusion, large variation in development of self-rated health from midlife to old age was observed a
119 ich the most impactful factor on average was self-rated health growing up, with Risk Ratios, relative
120  previous reports on US levels and trends in self-rated health have shown ambiguous results.
121 vities of daily living), nutritional status, self-rated health, health-related quality of life and se
122 t home), clinical (dementia, mental illness, self-rated health, hearing impairment, and vision impair
123 ardiovascular disease, depression, diabetes, self-rated health, high cholesterol, hypertension, perip
124 stressed students had low social support and self-rated health; high food insecurity, drug use, physi
125 tiple regression analysis showed that better self-rated health (i.e. OR = 0.373, 95%CI = 0.308-0.452
126 ological factors, cognitive performance, and self-rated health (ie, fully adjusted).
127 onship with mother, parental marital status, self-rated health, immigration status, and year of birth
128                   It is associated with poor self-rated health, impaired quality of life, social isol
129 oga-CaRe) on major cardiovascular events and self-rated health in a multicenter randomized controlled
130 disparities in self-rated health by reducing self-rated health in Black intervention versus white con
131                                              Self-rated health is a major indicator of an individual'
132                                           As self-rated health is an important predictor of health ou
133                                     Although self-rated health is proposed for use in public health m
134 , marital status, educational background and self-rated health), job-related factors (professional ti
135 ogical distress, low life satisfaction, poor self-rated health, low social contact, and loneliness ac
136 ates were adjusted for time-varying (income, self-rated health, marital status, instrumental activiti
137 alyses of socioeconomic disparities that use self-rated health may be particularly vulnerable to comp
138 s elude simple explanations but suggest that self-rated health may be unsuitable for monitoring chang
139 ; difference, 5.8 [95% CI, 0.3 to 11.2]) and self-rated health (mean [SE], 0.7 [0.3] vs -0.2 [0.3]; d
140                  Baby boomers reported lower self-rated health (mean difference, -5.30; p<0.001) and
141 hood disadvantage was associated with poorer self-rated health, mental health, and physical functioni
142   Results revealed a high prevalence of poor self-rated health, mental illness, and PTSD for all resp
143                                              Self-rated health, monthly income, work hours, patient-i
144  The dance intervention group improved their self-rated health more than the control group at all fol
145                                         Poor self-rated health, multimorbidity status, physical activ
146 come inequities on racialized differences in self-rated health (N=11,312) and obesity (N=10,547).
147 dex [n = 9,926], blood pressure [n = 3,195], self-rated health [n = 2523], morbidities [n = 1542]) co
148 the full model, comprised 8 predictors: age, self-rated health, number of sickness absences in previo
149 al Health (FIOH) risk score, comprising age, self-rated health, number of sickness absences, socioeco
150 association between high school football and self-rated health, obesity, and pain in adulthood in a r
151 association between high school football and self-rated health, obesity, and pain in adulthood using
152 ootball was not associated with poor or fair self-rated health (odds ratio (OR) = 0.88, 95% confidenc
153 ootball was not associated with poor or fair self-rated health (odds ratio [OR] 0.88, 95% confidence
154 ency cardiovascular hospitalization); and 2) self-rated health on the European Quality of Life-5 Dime
155  No significant differences were observed in self-rated health or chronic pain after first-trimester
156                        Further adjusting for self-rated health or depressive symptoms yielded similar
157 ion was associated with the deterioration of self-rated health (OR 1.32 [95% CI 1.10-1.58]) and incid
158 ssion (OR 1.57, 95% CI = 1.23-2.00) and poor self-rated health (OR 1.38, 95% CI = 1.03-1.83) in the y
159 rements, were found to increase odds of poor self-rated health (OR 1.67, 95% CI 1.35-1.98; I(2)=82.0%
160 , 2.07 [95% CI, 1.28-3.36]), those with poor self-rated health (OR, 2.30 [95% CI, 1.38-3.85]), diffic
161 ive services, uncontrolled risk factors, low self-rated health, or poor connection or inadequate acce
162 ng less physical activity, and having better self-rated health over follow-up, were significantly ass
163        When caregivers reported fair or poor self-rated health, patients were more than three times m
164 end-stage renal disease, diabetes, fair/poor self-rated health, physical inactivity, food insecurity,
165 utcomes were pain frequency (days per week), self-rated health (poor or fair, good, or very good or e
166 assess whether self-rated attractiveness and self-rated health predict facial sexual dimorphism prefe
167             Sex, age, body mass index (BMI), self-rated health, present illness, exercise, smoking, a
168        Current practices recommend placing a self-rated health question before specific health items
169 ts current recommendations, as inserting the self-rated health question before specific questions led
170 omparative analysis of responses to a common self-rated health question in 4 national surveys from 19
171 k control groups show no risk differences in self-rated health (RD=-0.009; 95% CI: -0.026, 0.008) or
172 tus, confidence in completing medical forms, self-rated health, satisfaction with medications, trust
173  Index and RAND Energy, Health Distress, and Self-Rated Health scales were assessed at study entry an
174 ty (Generalized Anxiety Disorder scale), and self-rated health (Short Form Health Survey Questionnair
175 t for age, body mass index, race, education, self-rated health, smoking status, comorbidities, and nu
176 e, grip strength, HbA1c, longevity, obesity, self-rated health, smoking status, triglycerides, type 2
177 ons vary by country, with the effect of poor self-rated health spanning 0.37 in Turkey to 1.19 in Nig
178  we investigated 1) whether individual-level self-rated health (SRH) (fair or poor vs. good or better
179           The subjective indicator of health self-rated health (SRH) and the chronic inflammation bio
180 We aimed to evaluate the association between self-rated health (SRH) and the risk of incident type 2
181                                  Interest in self-rated health (SRH) as a tool for use in disease and
182       In this study, we investigated whether self-rated health (SRH) can be predicted by in-work pove
183             The authors investigated whether self-rated health (SRH) had differential mortality risks
184 ng New Zealand's Family Tax Credit (FTC) and self-rated health (SRH) in 6,900 working-age parents usi
185 s and preventive health behaviors (PHBs) and self-rated health (SRH) in a sample of clinic patients i
186 the present study, the 5-year trends in poor self-rated health (SRH) in three municipalities of Iwate
187                                              Self-rated health (SRH) is a powerful predictor of clini
188                              Although poorer self-rated health (SRH) is associated with increased mor
189                                              Self-rated health (SRH) is one of the most frequently us
190                                      General self-rated health (SRH) is widely used to study trends a
191                                              Self-rated health (SRH) predicts chronic disease morbidi
192 ionships between union membership, poor/fair self-rated health (SRH), and moderate mental illness (Ke
193 o determine to what extent a single measure, self-rated health (SRH), independently predicts long-ter
194   Charlson Comorbidity Index (CCI) score and self-rated health (SRH).
195 ism worries, vigorous exercise, obesity, and self-rated health status and psychological and physical
196 ducational attainment, intelligence, income, self-rated health status and sedentary behaviors.
197  multivariable logistic regression analysis, self-rated health status is poor (OR 2.24, 95% CI 1.65-3
198 ctors, functional status, and comorbidities, self-rated health status remained associated with LCS (a
199 ificantly correlated with total AIMS scores, self-rated health status, health care costs, depression
200 controlling for demographic characteristics, self-rated health status, inhaled corticosteroid use, an
201 ence of at least 1 coexisting condition, and self-rated health status.
202 e sex, underweight, obesity, education, poor self-rated health, television-viewing time, and having a
203 se depressive symptomatology, cognition, and self-rated health than White adults.
204 0.23) are both larger for widows in the U.S. Self-rated health that is good, fair, or poor is related
205 lower socioeconomic status (SES), and poorer self-rated health, the genetic variants associated with
206  index, home ownership, qualifications, poor self-rated health, the presence of poor mobility, hypert
207 raphic variables, socio-economic status, and self-rated health; the density of beds and physicians in
208 experience had a significant impact on worse self-rated health; the pathways from structural equation
209  although higher oxytocin was linked to good self-rated health, this did not explain the rise in oxyt
210                     But after adjustment for self-rated health, treatment for hypertension, diabetes,
211                                              Self-rated health was 77 in Yoga-CaRe and 75.7 in the en
212                                              Self-rated health was also significantly associated with
213                          Over three decades, self-rated health was assessed in 1975, 1983, 1985-1986,
214                                              Self-rated health was assessed using a single-item quest
215 ng for sample design indicated that baseline self-rated health was associated with a significantly re
216 based latent trajectory analysis showed that self-rated health was constantly good for over half of t
217                                   Suboptimal self-rated health was more prevalent among those in low
218                                              Self-rated health was strongly related to CHD, mediated
219                                              Self-rated health was the primary outcome; secondary out
220 onic conditions, functional limitations, and self-rated health) was stronger in the 2012 sample than
221 rinking, serious psychological distress, and self-rated health were assessed.
222  Health Interview Survey, where questions on self-rated health were inserted in 1 of 2 locations: pre
223 in depressive symptomatology, cognition, and self-rated health were measured among 2,306 non-Hispanic
224      The adjusted odds ratios (ORs) for poor self-rated health were significantly lower for people wh

 
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