The Los Angeles Times ran a story this week, entitled “Macho Men: Too Tough for Healthcare?,” about new research suggesting that men who ‘strongly idealize masculinity’ and are of middle-age are 50% less likely to seek preventative care services from healthcare providers, in comparison to other men.
The LA Times highlighted these findings, presented at the American Sociological Association’s annual meeting:
[The study found that] men with strong masculine beliefs who worked in blue-collar jobs were more likely to report obtaining care than other men — the one exception to the findings. But highly educated macho men were just as unlikely to obtain preventive health care as low-educated macho men. Most research suggests that people with more education have better healthcare habits.
The original press release for the study included some thoughts from the author…
“This research strongly suggests that deep-seated masculinity beliefs are one core cause of men’s poor health, inasmuch as they reduce compliance with recommended preventative health services,” said Kristen W. Springer, the study’s primary investigator. Springer is an assistant professor of sociology at Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, as well as a Robert Wood Johnson Health & Society Scholar at Columbia University. “Although previous research points to the health-promoting effects of higher socio-economic status, in the case of the most masculine men—those who most strongly endorse ideals of ‘old school’ masculinity—increases in job status actually have a detrimental effect on preventative healthcare seeking.”
She continues…
“For masculine men in blue-collar occupations, this research suggests that the masculinity threat of seeking health care is less concerning than the masculinity threat of not performing their jobs,” Springer said. “However, as job status increases among men who have strong masculinity beliefs, the likelihood that they will obtain preventative healthcare declines significantly. These findings provide some insight into the persistent gender paradox in health whereby men have a lower life expectancy at birth relative to women, despite having higher socioeconomic resources.”
Read more from the press release.
USA Today covered the study as well, read here.
The story was also picked up by the New York Times a few days later, read here.
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