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2018, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :Although the ample literature on the determinants of SRH in developed countries uses sociodemographic factors, socioeconomic status, physical functioning, psychosocial well-being, a history of chronic conditions and health behaviors, and risk factors as predictors of SRH, many studies exclusively focused on subpopulations categorized by gender (Undén and Elofsson, 2006), ethnicity (Kómár et al., 2006), age (Hoeymans et al., 1997; Kivinen et al., 1998; Vingilis et al., 2002), immigration status (Newbold, 2005), and chronicity status and disability (Cott et al., 1999). Other studies focused on the effects of particular health behaviors and risk factors, such as obesity (Ferraro and Yu, 1995; Prosper et al., 2009; Cullinan and Gillespie, 2015), cholesterol level (Goldman et al., 2004), exercise (Lamb et al., 1990; Jylhä et al., 2001), alcohol consumption (Poikolainen et al., 1996; Stranges et al., 2006), medical insurance (Hullegie and Klein, 2010), socioeconomic status (Bobak et al., 1998; Nicholson et al., 2005), income inequality (Kennedy et al., 1998), and social capital (Schultz et al., 2008; Snelgrove et al., 2009). Although the empirical strand of literature that aims at identifying the determinant factors of healthcare utilization and the impact of utilization on health outcomes in Turkey is thin, a number of important studies have attempted to explain inequalities in healthcare utilization and SRH.
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