Assess Quality of Life among Iranian Married Women Residing in Rural Places

It is important how women describe their quality of life. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of rural residence on quality of life of the married women. The Wellness and Quality of Life Questionnaire (WHOQOL) was used to assess QOL rural residence in Iranian married women. A total of 1,140 (577 urban and 563 rural) women aged 20-45 years were selected using standard cluster sampling technique in Babol, Iran. The questionnaire with 55 items consists of five domains: physical state, mental/emotional state, stress evaluation, life enjoyment, and overall quality of life. Lower scores in three domains: physical state, mental/emotional state, and stress evaluation mean better QOL. Higher scores in life enjoyment and overall quality of life mean better QOL. Rural residences smoke more and have a lower level of education, higher level physical activity, higher level of good self reported dietary, and lower long term health problems than urban residents. After adjusting confounding variables, logistic regression indicated living in rural settings statistically decrease the probability of having worse quality of life related to physical health (OR 0.67; CI 0.50-0.91), higher life enjoyment (OR 0.44; CI 0.32-0.61), and better overall QOL (OR 0.44; CI 0.37-0.61). The results have been suggested to be useful in order to anticipate greater health care needs of the rural married women and improve their quality of life by providing more opportunities for rural women.


Introduction
The health-related quality of life (HRQL) is an important health index for different groups' people in worldwide (Horner-Johnson, Krahn, Andresen, & Hall, 2009). The concept of the quality of life reflects individuals' subjective and objective evaluations of both positive and negative aspects of physical health, emotional, and social functioning (Bazzichi et al., 2005;Bowling, Banister, Sutton, Evans, & Windsor, 2002;Brown, King, Butow, Dunn, & Coates, 2000;Nilsson, Parker, & Kabir, 2004). Many studies describe factors influencing HRQL among women. It has shown that more attention should be focused on improve the quality of life of women. and urban area. It is expected that rural women have worse health status and quality of life than urban women (Eberhardt & Pamuk, 2004;Filip & Zagorski, 2005;Probst et al., 2006;Probst, Moore, Baxley, & Lammie, 2002). However, Verma Sunil (2008) showed that total quality of life in urban area is significantly better than rural (Verma Sunil, 2008).
In the past few years, the concern for increasing the quality of life has been given to the role of place of residence in shaping individual's QOL. However, little is known about quality of life among Iranian married women or in rural women residences. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of rural residence site on the perception of quality of life of the married women aged 20-45 years.

Methods and Materials
The research design of this study was a population-based cross-sectional study. The standard cluster sampling technique was used to select 1,414 married women because it allows a small number of the largest population to be studied while providing statistically valid data. Considering the geographical areas in Babol at the beginning of the study, 120 clusters (of the 100 small administrative unit urban and 300 small unit rural) were selected according to the latest census. In order to determine accurately the associated quality of life (QOL) factors with rural residence, inclusion criteria for the study were: being married for a minimum of one year, aged 20 to 45 years, being mentally sound, and having the ability to understand a questionnaire with the help of an interviewer. The sampling frame comprised by the list of census enumeration areas with population and household information from the 2009 Population Census. Each of the six districts in Babol County was subdivided into one or two cities and rural aggregations. The primary sampling unit (PSU) for this study was a ward in urban areas, or village in rural areas. Because total number of wards and villages was relatively equal, at the first stage of sampling 120 PSU (60 in urban areas and 60 in rural areas) were randomly selected. At the second stage of sampling, about 12 households per PSU on average in urban areas and about 12 households per PSU on average in rural areas were selected. Every selected the cluster was approached by the supervisors and team leaders to identify eligible women who fulfill the selection criteria after taking consent. A starting household was randomly selected in the each cluster. Each house after the first one was surveyed until the entire selected cluster had been surveyed. A total of 1,414 women seen at their home, 274 (19.4%) did not like participate in this study; thus a complete of 1,140 (577 urban and 563 rural) interviews were completed with a participation rate of 80.6 percent.

Data Collection
This study was approved by Babol University of Medical Sciences for ethics in medical research. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants in the study. Trained skillful personnel approached the women in the room, and carried out brief face-to-face interview to collect socio-demographic information. Following the interview, women were invited to complete QOL instruments. The following instruments were used.
A socio-demographic and clinical data form, which assesses age, age at marriage, educational level, BMI, own occupation, partner occupation, socio-economic status, own occupation, infertility.
The Wellness and Quality of Life Questionnaire (WHOQOL) instrument as a measure of the physical and psychological aspects of health-related quality of life was developed by David Epstein (Epstein, 1996). It has been translated and validated into Farsi language (Nilforooshan, Latifi, Abedi, & Ahmadi, 2006). Few recent studies have been shown that HRQOL is both valid and reliable and provides scale of QOL (Fekkes et al., 2003;Ragni et al., 2005).
The scale included the five determinants of QOL involving physical health (which includes items regarding pain, feeling of tension, energy and fatigue, sleep, incidence of colds or flu, incidence of headaches and incidence of dizziness or light-headedness), mental/emotional health (depression/anxiety and emotional control), stress (which includes items regarding general well-being, emotional well-being, significant relationships, family, health, sex life, work, and coping with daily problems), life Enjoyment (including items about overall score for the Life Enjoyment) and overall domain (which includes items regarding individual feelings relative to the quality of life) represents an assessment on QOL and health satisfaction. WHOQOL questions were scored using 5-or 7-point Likert-tpe scales.
The Physical State Scale, mental/emotional, and stress evaluation domain have a range of 10-50 and were scored using 5 point Likert-tpe scales (from 1= never/none to 5= constantly/extensive), with a lower score indicating a better QOL. The life enjoyment scale has a range of 11-55 and was scored using 5 point Likert-tpe scales (from 1= not at all to 5= extensive). The overall score of quality of life scale has 14 items scored using 5 point Likert-tpe scales from 1 (terrible) to 7 (delighted) with a range of 14-98. Higher scores in life enjoyment and www.ccsenet.org/gjhs Global Journal of Health Science Vol. 5, No. 4;2013 overall domain of quality of life indicate a better QOL.
Rural women were referred to women living in rural areas while urban women were indicated to women living in urban area.
Fertility status and cause of infertility were assessed by self-reported questionnaire. Infertility referred to a delay in conception for least 12-months of unprotected intercourse (Schmitz, Kruse, & Kugler, 2003). The validity and reliability of questionnaire were assessed by protesting. The alpha coefficient and internal consistency of infertility was 0.80 and 0.89, respectively.
The weight of the women was recorded using digital scales to the nearest 100 grams, with the participant minimally clothed and without shoes. Height was measured with a tape measure (Craig et al., 2003). Body mass index was calculated using the formula of weight (kg)/height 2 (m) (Higgins, 2008).

Statistical Analysis
All analyses were performed with SPSS (version16.0). The final multivariate model that included the lifetime infertility as dependent variables that were related to this outcome at P=0.2 in the bivariate analyses. To test the association between QOL and characteristics, stepwise multiple logistic regression was used. Odds ratio (ORs) were assessed using maximum likelihood and associated 95% CI were computed. All independent variables that met the above criteria were included in the multiple logistic regression. A P value of 0.05 or less was considered significant.

Results
Of the 1,140 women who participated, 49.4% were rural residents among study participants. The mean age of women were 33.3±7.1 years old with the slightly younger women among them living in urban settings (32.7 years old vs. 33.8 years old). Age at marriage of the women living in rural area was lower than them living in urban settings. There were more women lower education among the women living in rural area, and lower working women comparing to those in urban area. There was more self-reported good dietary, more physical activity, more smoking among women living in rural sitting. Table 1 describes the characteristics of the sample included in further logistic regression. There was a statistically significant difference in the mean score in three domains (physical state, stress evaluation, and life enjoyment) between rural and urban women. We found a worse physical state, a better stress evaluation, and a better life enjoyment in women from rural area. There was no significant in the mean scores in mental/emotional state and overall quality of life between the women rural and urban area groups (Table 2).

Discussion
Our findings showed that women living in the rural area had significantly higher level of quality of life in domain of physical, lower level of quality of life in domain life enjoyment and overall QOL than the urban women.
In the current study rural residents smoke more and have a lower level of education, higher blue-collar worker, and higher level physical activity. Several Studies support these findings of the current study (Filip & Zagorski, 2005).
The study revealed the association between quality of life with education, housewife, current or ex-smoker, and partner occupation. Conversely, Bahatia et al (Bhatia, Swami, Thakur, & Bhatia, 2007) reported a significant association between level of education and quality of life while Barau et al showed education level is not associated with QOL (Barua, Mangesh, Kumar, & Saajan, 2005). Anderson and Yoshizawa (2007) demonstrated that education physical activity, body mass index, menopause, alcohol consumption were significantly with quality of life among Australian an Japanese women (Anderson & Yoshizawa, 2007). Artazcoz et al., suggested that women workers had a better health status than housewives (Artazcoz, Borrell, Benach, Cortes, & Rohlfs, 2004).
The current study, the housewife women were associated with worse physical and stress evaluation and associated with better life enjoyment and overall domain of quality of life. Smoking status was positively associated with better stress evaluation domain of quality of life. Quality of life was not associated with age at marriage of women and alcohol use.
After adjusting some confounding variables we found that Living in rural areas was associated with better physical health-related quality of life but associated with worse life enjoyment and overall quality of life. These findings are in contrast with the results described by Zagozdzon et al. (2001) showed that living in rural areas rural residence was associated with worse physical domain of quality of life and associated with better mental health (Zagozdzon, Kolarzyk, & Marcinkowski). Whereas the other studies revealed rural woman had poor health related quality of life than the urban women (Tsai, Chi, Lee, & Chou, 2004;William, Abdel-tawab, Hassan, & Mohamed, 2004).

Conclusion
There are several limitations of the study. First, it was a cross-sectional design to assess identification factors associated with increase or decrease in QOL, which limited our ability to assess causal inference. We believe that the longitudinal studies are needed to validate these findings (Bhattacharya et al., 2009). Second, we did not compare quality of care in rural and urban area. In addition, the lack of definition the relation between health care and quality of life may have resulted in a lack of comparability of results. Third, assessing health care of rural setting and relationship of access to care with health-related care is useful for planning the total health care delivery to rural women schedule.
Despite the limitation, this study has important implication to future research and programs. Our study suggests that the quality of life of rural women was better in stress evaluation and life enjoyment domains whereas QOL in urban women was better in physical domain. This may be because of relationship some factor including education, job of women, smoking, and partner occupation with quality of life. However after adjusting this confounding variables quality of life associated with rurality. Rurality was associated with better physical, poor life enjoyment and poor overall quality of life. These results strongly suggest that Iranian health system anticipate greater health care needs of the rural married women and promote their health and welfare. The community health nurse should be able improve quality of life of rural women by providing more opportunities for rural women.