Alarcón Graciela S, McGwin Gerald, Sanchez Martha L, Bastian Holly M, Fessler Barri J, Friedman Alan W, Baethge Bruce A, Roseman Jeffrey, Reveille John D
The University of Alabama at Birmingham, AL 35249, USA.
Arthritis Rheum. 2004 Feb 15;51(1):73-7. doi: 10.1002/art.20085.
To determine the impact of wealth on disease activity in the multiethnic (Hispanic, African American, and Caucasian) LUMINA (Lupus in Minorities, Nature versus nurture) cohort of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and disease duration < or =5 years at enrollment.
Variables (socioeconomic, demographic, clinical, immunologic, immunogenetic, behavioral, and psychological) were measured at enrollment and annually thereafter. Four questions from the Women's Health Initiative study were used to measure wealth. Disease activity was measured with the Systemic Lupus Activity Measure (SLAM). The relationship between the different variables and wealth was then examined. Next, the impact of wealth on disease activity was examined in regression models where the dependent variables were the SLAM score and SLAM global (physician). Variables previously found to impact disease activity plus the wealth questions were included in the models.
Questions on income, assets, and debt were found to distinguish patients into groups, wealthier and less wealthy. Less wealthy patients tended to be younger, women, noncaucasian, less educated, unmarried, less likely to have health insurance, and more likely to live below the poverty line. They also tended to have more active disease, more abnormal illness-related behaviors, less social support, and lower levels of self reported mental functioning. None of the wealth questions was retained in the regression models, although other socioeconomic features (such as African American ethnicity, poverty, and younger age) did.
Wealth, per se, does not appear to have an additional predictive value, over and above traditional measures of socioeconomic status, in SLE disease activity.
确定财富对多民族(西班牙裔、非裔美国人和白种人)LUMINA(少数族裔狼疮,先天与后天)队列中系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)患者疾病活动的影响,这些患者在入组时疾病病程小于或等于5年。
在入组时及此后每年测量变量(社会经济、人口统计学、临床、免疫、免疫遗传、行为和心理方面的变量)。采用妇女健康倡议研究中的四个问题来衡量财富。用系统性狼疮活动度量表(SLAM)来测量疾病活动。然后检查不同变量与财富之间的关系。接下来,在回归模型中检查财富对疾病活动的影响,其中因变量为SLAM评分和SLAM总体评分(医生评定)。模型中纳入先前发现会影响疾病活动的变量以及财富相关问题。
关于收入、资产和债务的问题可将患者分为较富裕和较不富裕两组。较不富裕的患者往往更年轻、为女性、非白种人、受教育程度较低、未婚、更不太可能有医疗保险,且更有可能生活在贫困线以下。他们还往往疾病活动更活跃、与疾病相关的行为更异常、社会支持更少,且自我报告的心理功能水平更低。回归模型中未保留任何一个财富相关问题,不过其他社会经济特征(如非裔美国人种族、贫困和年龄较小)被保留了下来。
就SLE疾病活动而言,财富本身似乎并不比传统的社会经济地位衡量指标具有额外的预测价值。