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Table 2 Prevalence of poor health according to educational attainment and household arrangements by European groups of countries and gender (ages 30–59) 2014

From: Examining social determinants of health: the role of education, household arrangements and country groups by gender

  

Dual-earner countries

Liberal

General family support

Familistic

Transition post-socialist

Men (%)

Women (%)

Men (%)

Women (%)

Men (%)

Women (%)

Men (%)

Women (%)

Men (%)

Women (%)

Low education

No partner-no children

34.1

44.1

25.3

36.3

37.6

48.9

29.1

43.3

42.2

62.1

No partner-children

22.7

30.9

27.1

31.1

29.8

44.9

31.8

43.1

46.7

55.8

Partner-no children

30.4

33.2

21.5

31.5

30.9

41.5

36.9

45.1

46.5

56.8

Partner-children

22.8

24.6

17.6

21.6

27.2

32.5

28.0

34.1

36.1

44.5

Medium education

No partner-no children

26.9

28.7

20.0

22.0

28.4

30.2

13.1

18.7

28.2

39.8

No partner-children

22.1

23.6

17.6

22.0

24.0

31.6

16.5

24.1

34.9

39.4

Partner-no children

20.7

24.2

19.1

18.6

27.8

29.4

16.6

23.2

40.3

45.5

Partner-children

17.1

17.0

14.2

15.1

21.4

20.2

13.9

15.8

27.4

28.8

High education

No partner-no children

18.9

17.6

13.9

15.9

17.5

20.3

8.8

14.2

15.7

22.2

No partner-children

12.5

16.4

18.6

15.3

14.6

20.0

11.5

18.7

20.8

26.7

Partner-no children

10.7

14.3

10.0

11.0

15.1

18.0

10.3

13.7

24.1

28.6

Partner-children

9.0

10.7

10.0

9.8

12.5

13.1

10.4

10.4

15.4

17.0

 

Total

17.4

17.7

15.4

17.8

21.1

23.7

19.3

24.1

28.7

33.1

  1. Data source: EU-SILC 2014
  2. Note: Dual-earner (Denmark, Finland, Island, Norway and Sweden); Liberal (Switzerland, United Kingdom, Ireland and Malta); General family support (Austria, Belgium, Germany, France and Netherlands); Familistic (Greece, Spain, Italy and Portugal); and Transition post-socialist (Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Estonia, Croatia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovenia and Slovak Republic