Callahan Leigh F, Shreffler Jack, Mielenz Thelma J, Kaufman Jay S, Schoster Britta, Randolph Randy, Sloane Philip, DeVellis Robert, Weinberger Morris
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Thurston Arthritis Research Center, 3300 Thurston Bldg, CB#7280, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-7280, USA.
Prev Chronic Dis. 2009 Jan;6(1):A05. Epub 2008 Dec 15.
We examined health-related quality of life (HRQOL) in white and African American patients based on their own and their community's socioeconomic status.
Participants were 4,565 adults recruited from 17 family physician practices in urban and rural areas of North Carolina. Education was used as a proxy for individual socioeconomic status, and the census block-group poverty level was used as a proxy for community socioeconomic status. HRQOL measures were the 12-Item Short Form Survey Instrument, physical component summary (PCS) and mental component summary (MCS), and 3 Centers for Disease Control and Prevention HRQOL healthy days measures. Multilevel analyses examined independent associations of individual and community poverty level with HRQOL, adjusting for demographics and clustering by family practice. Analyses were stratified by race and were conducted on subgroups of arthritis and cardiovascular disease patients.
Among whites, all 5 HRQOL measures were significantly associated with the lowest individual socioeconomic status, and 4 HRQOL measures were associated with the lowest community socioeconomic status (MCS being the exception). Among African Americans, 4 HRQOL measures were significantly associated with the lowest individual socioeconomic status and the lowest community socioeconomic status (PCS being the exception). Arthritis and cardiovascular disease subgroup analyses showed generally analogous findings.
Better HRQOL measures generally were associated with low levels of community poverty and high levels of education, emphasizing the need for further exploration of factors that influence health.
我们根据白人和非裔美国患者自身及其社区的社会经济地位,对其健康相关生活质量(HRQOL)进行了研究。
参与者为从北卡罗来纳州城乡地区17个家庭医生诊所招募的4565名成年人。教育程度被用作个体社会经济地位的替代指标,人口普查街区组贫困水平被用作社区社会经济地位的替代指标。HRQOL测量指标包括12项简短调查问卷工具、身体成分总结(PCS)和心理成分总结(MCS),以及3项疾病控制和预防中心的HRQOL健康天数测量指标。多层次分析研究了个体和社区贫困水平与HRQOL的独立关联,并对人口统计学因素进行了调整,同时按家庭医生诊所进行聚类分析。分析按种族分层,并在关节炎和心血管疾病患者亚组中进行。
在白人中,所有5项HRQOL测量指标均与最低的个体社会经济地位显著相关,4项HRQOL测量指标与最低的社区社会经济地位相关(MCS除外)。在非裔美国人中,4项HRQOL测量指标与最低的个体社会经济地位和最低的社区社会经济地位显著相关(PCS除外)。关节炎和心血管疾病亚组分析显示了大致相似的结果。
较好的HRQOL测量指标通常与低水平的社区贫困和高水平的教育相关,这强调了需要进一步探索影响健康的因素。