Goldman Dana P, Smith James P
RAND, 1700 Main Street, Santa Monica, CA 90407, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2002 Aug 6;99(16):10929-34. doi: 10.1073/pnas.162086599. Epub 2002 Jul 24.
There are large differences in health outcomes by socioeconomic status (SES) that cannot be explained fully by traditional arguments, such as access to care or poor health behaviors. We consider a different explanation-better self-management of disease by the more educated. We examine differences by education in treatment adherence among patients with two illnesses, diabetes and HIV, and then assess the subsequent impact of differential adherence on health status. One unique component of this research is that for diabetes we combine two different surveys-one cohort study and one randomized clinical trial-that are usually used exclusively by either biomedical or/and social scientists separately. For both illnesses, we find significant effects of adherence that are much stronger among patients with high SES. After controlling for other factors, more educated HIV+ patients are more likely to adhere to therapy, and this adherence made them experience improvements in their self-reported general health. Similarly, among diabetics, the less educated were much more likely to switch treatment, which led to worsening general health. In the randomized trial setting, intensive treatment regimens that compensated for poor adherence led to better improvements in glycemic control for the less educated. Among two distinct chronic illnesses, the ability to maintain a better health regimen is an important independent determinant of subsequent health outcomes. This finding is robust across clinical trial and population-based settings. Because this ability varies by schooling, self-maintenance is an important reason for the steep SES gradient in health outcomes.
社会经济地位(SES)不同,健康结果存在很大差异,而这些差异无法完全用传统观点来解释,比如获得医疗服务的机会或不良健康行为等。我们考虑一种不同的解释——受教育程度较高者能更好地进行疾病自我管理。我们研究了糖尿病和艾滋病这两种疾病患者在治疗依从性方面的教育差异,然后评估了不同依从性对健康状况的后续影响。这项研究的一个独特之处在于,对于糖尿病,我们结合了两项不同的调查——一项队列研究和一项随机临床试验,而这两项调查通常分别由生物医学科学家或社会科学家单独使用。对于这两种疾病,我们发现依从性有显著影响,在社会经济地位较高的患者中影响更强。在控制了其他因素后,受教育程度较高的艾滋病病毒感染者更有可能坚持治疗,这种依从性使他们在自我报告的总体健康方面有所改善。同样,在糖尿病患者中,受教育程度较低者更有可能更换治疗方案,这导致总体健康状况恶化。在随机试验环境中,针对依从性差的强化治疗方案使受教育程度较低者的血糖控制得到了更好的改善。在两种不同的慢性病中,维持更好健康方案的能力是后续健康结果的一个重要独立决定因素。这一发现在临床试验和基于人群的环境中都很可靠。由于这种能力因受教育程度而异,自我维持是健康结果中社会经济地位梯度陡峭的一个重要原因。