Beydoun May A, Popkin Barry M
Department of Nutrition and Carolina Population Center, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB # 8120 University Square, 123 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill, NC 27516-3997, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2005 May;60(9):2045-57. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2004.08.063. Epub 2004 Nov 18.
The purpose of this paper is to examine the impact of baseline socio-economic factors on functional status decline over a period of 3 years among a sample of Chinese older men and women, using the China Health and Nutrition Surveys of 1997 and 2000. In addition, the study tries to determine whether risk differentials by these socio-economic factors can be explained by other demographic, health-related and nutritional risk factors. The eligible study population was defined as women and men aged 55 years and over who at baseline were free from any form of disablement in activities of daily living (ADLs) or instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) tasks. Among subjects with complete data at followed-up (N = 976), the overall incidence proportions of any functional status decline, IADL only and ADL declines were 25.8%, 18.9% and 6.9%, respectively. Our study found that education is strongly and inversely associated with incidence of combined functional status decline and IADL only but not with the onset of ADL disability. Similarly, household income per capita was inversely associated with functional status decline and IADL disability incidence, with a clear dose-response relationship, even after adjustment for age and gender. However, multivariate analysis demonstrated that the latter association was highly confounded by other demographic factors, especially urban-rural area of residence. Using a combined measure of socio-economic status that includes years of education and household income per capita, the age and gender-adjusted odds ratio for functional status decline and belonging to lower SES class as compared to middle, upper middle and upper classes was 3.82 (95% CI: 2.15, 6.77) and 2.77 (95% CI: 1.52, 5.03) after further adjustment for urban-rural area of residence and living arrangements. Hence, there are wide socio-economic disparities in the functional health of older adults in China, although such disparities are more seen for IADL decline and are almost exclusively attributed to differentials in educational attainment. Finally, nutritional and health-related risk factors do not seem to act as intermediate factors in this association and hence further research should try to uncover other mechanisms by which SES affects changes in functional health among older adults in China.
本文旨在利用1997年和2000年的中国健康与营养调查,研究基线社会经济因素对中国老年男性和女性样本在3年期间功能状态下降的影响。此外,该研究试图确定这些社会经济因素造成的风险差异是否可以由其他人口统计学、健康相关和营养风险因素来解释。符合条件的研究人群定义为年龄在55岁及以上、基线时在日常生活活动(ADL)或工具性日常生活活动(IADL)任务中无任何形式残疾的男性和女性。在随访时有完整数据的受试者中(N = 976),任何功能状态下降、仅IADL下降和ADL下降的总体发病率分别为25.8%、18.9%和6.9%。我们的研究发现,教育程度与功能状态综合下降和仅IADL下降的发生率呈强烈负相关,但与ADL残疾的发生无关。同样,人均家庭收入与功能状态下降和IADL残疾发生率呈负相关,即使在调整年龄和性别后,仍有明显的剂量反应关系。然而,多变量分析表明,后一种关联受到其他人口统计学因素的高度混淆,尤其是居住的城乡地区。使用包括受教育年限和人均家庭收入的社会经济地位综合指标,在进一步调整居住的城乡地区和生活安排后,与中、中上和上层阶级相比,功能状态下降且属于较低社会经济阶层的年龄和性别调整后的优势比分别为3.82(95%CI:2.15,6.77)和2.77(95%CI:1.52,5.03)。因此,中国老年人的功能健康存在很大的社会经济差异,尽管这种差异在IADL下降方面更为明显,并且几乎完全归因于教育程度的差异。最后,营养和健康相关风险因素似乎在这种关联中不作为中间因素,因此进一步的研究应试图揭示社会经济地位影响中国老年人功能健康变化的其他机制。