Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol BS8 2PS.
BMJ. 2010 Aug 11;341:c4092. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c4092.
To explore geographical and sociodemographic factors associated with variation in equity in access to total hip and knee replacement surgery.
Combining small area estimates of need and provision to explore equity in access to care.
English census wards.
Patients throughout England who needed total hip or knee replacement and numbers who received surgery.
Predicted rates of need (derived from the Somerset and Avon Survey of Health and English Longitudinal Study of Ageing) and provision (derived from the hospital episode statistics database). Equity rate ratios comparing rates of provision relative to need by sociodemographic, hospital, and distance variables.
For both operations there was an "n" shaped curve by age. Compared with people aged 50-59, those aged 60-84 got more provision relative to need, while those aged >or=85 received less total hip replacement (adjusted rate ratio 0.68, 95% confidence interval 0.65 to 0.72) and less total knee replacement (0.87, 0.82 to 0.93). Compared with women, men received more provision relative to need for total hip replacement (1.08, 1.05 to 1.10) and total knee replacement (1.31, 1.28 to 1.34). Compared with the least deprived, residents in the most deprived areas got less provision relative to need for total hip replacement (0.31, 0.30 to 0.33) and total knee replacement (0.33, 0.31 to 0.34). For total knee replacement, those in urban areas got higher provision relative to need, but for total hip replacement it was highest in villages/isolated areas. For total knee replacement, patients living in non-white areas received more provision relative to need (1.04, 1.00 to 1.07) than those in predominantly white areas, but for total hip replacement there was no effect. Adjustment for hospital characteristics did not attenuate the effects.
There is evidence of inequity in access to total hip and total knee replacement surgery by age, sex, deprivation, rurality, and ethnicity. Adjustment for hospital and distance did not attenuate these effects. Policy makers should examine factors at the level of patients or primary care to understand the determinants of inequitable provision.
探讨与全髋关节和全膝关节置换手术可及性公平性相关的地理和社会人口因素。
结合小面积需求和供应估计来探索护理可及性的公平性。
英国普查区。
英格兰需要全髋关节或全膝关节置换的患者以及接受手术的患者人数。
需求的预测率(源自萨默塞特和埃文调查健康和英国老龄化纵向研究)和供应率(源自医院发病统计数据库)。通过社会人口、医院和距离变量,比较供应相对于需求的公平性的供应率比值。
对于两种手术,年龄都呈“n”形曲线。与 50-59 岁的人相比,60-84 岁的人获得的手术量与需求的比值更高,而>85 岁的人接受的全髋关节置换术(调整后的比率 0.68,95%置信区间 0.65 至 0.72)和全膝关节置换术(0.87,0.82 至 0.93)则较少。与女性相比,男性接受的全髋关节置换术(1.08,1.05 至 1.10)和全膝关节置换术(1.31,1.28 至 1.34)的供应相对于需求更多。与最贫困地区的居民相比,最贫困地区的居民获得的全髋关节置换术(0.31,0.30 至 0.33)和全膝关节置换术(0.33,0.31 至 0.34)的供应相对需求较少。对于全膝关节置换术,城市地区的供应相对于需求更高,但对于全髋关节置换术,最高的是村庄/孤立地区。对于全膝关节置换术,居住在非白色地区的患者接受的手术供应相对需求更多(1.04,1.00 至 1.07),而居住在以白人为主的地区的患者则没有这种效果。调整医院特征并不能减弱这些影响。
在全髋关节和全膝关节置换手术的可及性方面,存在着按年龄、性别、贫困程度、农村/城乡隔离程度和种族划分的不公平现象。对医院和距离的调整并不能减弱这些影响。政策制定者应在患者或初级保健层面研究因素,以了解不公平供应的决定因素。