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贫困与术前疾病严重程度之间是否存在关联?一项基于患者报告的健康状况的横断面研究。

Is there an association between deprivation and pre-operative disease severity? A cross-sectional study of patient-reported health status.

机构信息

Department of Primary Care and Social Medicine, Imperial College London, UK.

出版信息

Int J Qual Health Care. 2009 Oct;21(5):311-5. doi: 10.1093/intqhc/mzp033. Epub 2009 Aug 18.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

Differences in access to elective surgery may contribute to socioeconomic differences in health. We studied the associations between pre-operative health status (as an indicator of clinical need) and deprivation.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional study with risk-adjusted comparison of preoperative patient-reported health status and deprivation scores.

SETTING

Thirteen NHS hospitals, two independent sector treatment centres and one private hospital in England and Wales.

PARTICIPANTS

A total of 1160 NHS-funded patients undergoing hip replacement, knee replacement or varicose vein surgery.

INTERVENTION

s) None.

MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): General health status (EQ-5D), disease-specific health status (Oxford hip score, Oxford knee score and Aberdeen varicose vein symptom severity score) and area deprivation score.

RESULTS

Patients from more deprived areas reported worse EQ-5D scores. Differences in crude mean disease-specific health status scores between the least and most deprived fifths were small: hip score 3.5; knee score 6.8; varicose vein score 4.8. When risk adjusted the strength of the association fell by about half for hip (0.176-0.083) and knee (0.214-0.117) and one-third for varicose vein surgery (0.215-0.140), although the coefficients remained statistically significant (P < or = 0.01).

CONCLUSIONS

Deprivation was associated with worse pre-operative general health status. However, given that the variation in pre-operative disease-specific health status by deprivation score was of small clinical significance and the limited power of the risk adjustment model, there is little evidence of socioeconomic inequity in access to three common elective surgical procedures.

摘要

目的

手术机会的差异可能导致健康方面的社会经济差异。我们研究了术前健康状况(作为临床需求的指标)与贫困之间的关系。

设计

横断面研究,对术前患者报告的健康状况和贫困评分进行风险调整比较。

地点

英格兰和威尔士的 13 家 NHS 医院、2 家独立部门治疗中心和 1 家私立医院。

参与者

共 1160 名 NHS 资助的接受髋关节置换术、膝关节置换术或静脉曲张手术的患者。

干预措施

无。

主要观察指标

一般健康状况(EQ-5D)、疾病特异性健康状况(牛津髋关节评分、牛津膝关节评分和阿伯丁静脉曲张症状严重程度评分)和区域贫困评分。

结果

来自贫困地区的患者报告的 EQ-5D 评分较差。最贫困和最富裕五分之一之间的粗平均疾病特异性健康状况评分差异较小:髋关节评分 3.5;膝关节评分 6.8;静脉曲张评分 4.8。在风险调整后,髋关节(0.176-0.083)和膝关节(0.214-0.117)的关联强度下降了约一半,静脉曲张手术(0.215-0.140)下降了三分之一,尽管系数仍具有统计学意义(P < 0.01)。

结论

贫困与术前一般健康状况较差有关。然而,鉴于术前疾病特异性健康状况的差异因贫困评分而变化很小,且风险调整模型的能力有限,因此,在三种常见的择期手术中,没有证据表明社会经济不平等影响手术机会。

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