Health status of Saudi women, the case of Yanbu al-Sinaiya

Neda Abdelsalam Ali Jambi, The University of Texas School of Public Health

Abstract

Detailed data on the health status of Saudi women are lacking. This cross sectional study attempts to provide a comprehensive description of the health status of Saudi females between the ages of 15-45 residing in Yanbu Al-Siniyah. The purpose is to assess women's needs for health services. The health status indicators are chronic tracer conditions, reported symptoms and multidimensional functioning levels. The generic functioning instrument of the Medical Outcome Study was used to estimate physical, social, and role functioning; degree of pain and health perceptions. The information was obtained by interviewing subjects and abstracting facts from their medical records. The results show functioning scores are in the "well health" range for physical, social, role and pain. Crowding and education have an equal or stronger effect of reducing functioning levels than the diagnosed tracer conditions. The highest prevalence conditions having a definite functional impact and diagnosed adequately in primary care are anemia, urinary tract infection, hemorrhoids, rheumatoid arthritis, caries and gingivitis. Reported symptoms strongly reducing function levels in this study are dyspnea, heart pain, incontinence, eye and skin problems, and joint ache. The impact of the reliability and validity of the measures used and other limitations of the results are discussed. Finally, some policy implications and suggestions for future study are presented.

Subject Area

Public health|Womens studies|Demographics

Recommended Citation

Jambi, Neda Abdelsalam Ali, "Health status of Saudi women, the case of Yanbu al-Sinaiya" (1994). Texas Medical Center Dissertations (via ProQuest). AAI9513531.
https://digitalcommons.library.tmc.edu/dissertations/AAI9513531

Share

COinS