Bobak Martin, Murphy Mike, Rose Richard, Marmot Michael
UCL International Insitute for Society and Health, University College London, 1-19 Torrington Place, London WC1E 6BT, UK.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2007 Nov;61(11):990-6. doi: 10.1136/jech.2006.052134.
To examine whether, in former communist countries that have undergone profound social and economic transformation, health status is associated with income inequality and other societal characteristics, and whether this represents something more than the association of health status with individual socioeconomic circumstances.
Multilevel analysis of cross-sectional data.
13 Countries from Central and Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
Population samples aged 18+ years (a total of 15 331 respondents).
Poor self-rated health.
There were marked differences among participating countries in rates of poor health (a greater than twofold difference between the countries with the highest and lowest rates of poor health), gross domestic product per capita adjusted for purchasing power parity (a greater than threefold difference), the Gini coefficient of income inequality (twofold difference), corruption index (twofold difference) and homicide rates (20-fold difference). Ecologically, the age- and sex-standardised prevalence of poor self-rated health correlated strongly with life expectancy at age 15 (r = -0.73). In multilevel analyses, societal (country-level) measures of income inequality were not associated with poor health. Corruption and gross domestic product per capita were associated with poor health after controlling for individuals' socioeconomic circumstances (education, household income, marital status and ownership of household items); the odds ratios were 1.15 (95% confidence interval 1.03 to 1.29) per 1 unit (on a 10-point scale) increase in the corruption index and 0.79 (95% confidence interval 0.68 to 0.93) per $5000 increase in gross domestic product per capita. The effects of gross domestic product and corruption were virtually identical in people whose household income was below and above the median.
Societal measures of prosperity and corruption, but not income inequalities, were associated with health independently of individual-level socioeconomic characteristics. The finding that these effects were similar in persons with lower and higher income suggests that these factors do not operate exclusively through poverty.
探讨在经历了深刻社会经济转型的前共产主义国家中,健康状况是否与收入不平等及其他社会特征相关,以及这是否意味着健康状况与个体社会经济状况之间的关联之外还有其他因素。
对横断面数据进行多层次分析。
来自中欧、东欧和前苏联的13个国家。
18岁及以上的人口样本(共15331名受访者)。
自评健康状况差。
参与研究的国家在健康状况差的发生率(健康状况最差和最好的国家之间相差两倍多)、经购买力平价调整的人均国内生产总值(相差三倍多)、收入不平等的基尼系数(相差两倍)、腐败指数(相差两倍)和凶杀率(相差20倍)方面存在显著差异。从生态学角度看,年龄和性别标准化的自评健康状况差的患病率与15岁时的预期寿命密切相关(r = -0.73)。在多层次分析中,社会层面(国家层面)的收入不平等指标与健康状况差无关。在控制个体社会经济状况(教育程度、家庭收入、婚姻状况和家庭物品拥有情况)后,腐败和人均国内生产总值与健康状况差相关;腐败指数每增加1个单位(满分10分),优势比为1.15(95%置信区间1.03至1.29),人均国内生产总值每增加5000美元,优势比为0.79(95%置信区间0.68至0.93)。国内生产总值和腐败对家庭收入低于和高于中位数的人群的影响几乎相同。
社会层面的繁荣和腐败指标,而非收入不平等,与健康状况独立相关,且不受个体层面社会经济特征的影响。收入较低和较高人群的这些影响相似,这一发现表明这些因素并非仅通过贫困起作用。