Wiki:
Salutogenesis is a term coined by
Aaron Antonovsky,
[1] a professor of medical sociology. The term describes an approach focusing on factors that support human
health and well-being, rather than on factors that cause disease. More specifically, the "
salutogenic model" is concerned with the relationship between health, stress, and coping.
Antonovsky's theories reject the "traditional medical-model
dichotomy separating health and illness". He described the relationship as a continuous variable, what he called the "
health-ease versus
dis-ease continuum".
[1]
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Background
Poor
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.
Conclusions
SRH (
self reported health) 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.