Examining Emotional, Physical, Social, and Spiritual Health as Determinants of Self-Rated Health Status
- 1 March 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in American Journal of Health Promotion
- Vol. 12 (4) , 275-282
- https://doi.org/10.4278/0890-1171-12.4.275
Abstract
Purpose.: To determine whether individuals' perceptions of their emotional, physical, social, and spiritual health constitute elements of their self-rated health status operationalized with a commonly employed single indicator. Design.: Secondary analysis of cross-sectional survey data. Structural equation modeling with LISREL was used. Setting.: The Yukon Health Promotion Survey, Yukon Territory, Canada, 1993. Subjects.: The population-based sample was made up of 742 women and 713 men between 15 and 90 years of age; 80.3% responded. Measures.: Self-rated health status was operationalized with the “excellent, good, fair, poor” indicator derived from the question: “In general, compared to other people your age, would you say your health is. …” Social, spiritual, emotional, and physical health status were also self-rated from excellent to poor. Results.: The model's fit of the data was acceptable. Only physical health status significantly contributed to the variance in self-rated health status (55.1% of the variance was explained). Emotional, social, and spiritual health were found to have no effect on individuals' ratings of their health status. Conclusions.: Although recent conceptualizations have broadened in much of the theoretical and political discourse about health, especially in health promotion, the self-rated health status indicator measures only physical health status.Keywords
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