Department of Sociology, Carleton University, D795 LA, 1125 Colonel By Drive, Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 5B6 Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2011 Jul;73(1):50-9. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.04.010. Epub 2011 May 18.
A large body of research shows that social determinants of health have significant impact on the health of Canadians and Americans. Yet, very few studies have directly compared the extent to which social factors are associated with health in the two countries, in large part due to the historical lack of comparable cross-national data. This study examines differences in the effect of a wide-range of social determinants on self-rated health across the two populations using data explicitly designed to facilitate comparative health research-Joint Canada/United States Survey of Health. The results show that: 1) sociodemographic and socioeconomic factors have substantial effects on health in each country, though the size of the effects tends to differ-gender, nativity, and race are stronger predictors of health among Americans while the effects of age and marital status on health are much larger in Canada; the income gradient in health is steeper in Canada whereas the education gradient is steeper in the U.S.; 2) Socioeconomic status (SES) mediates or links sociodemographic variables with health in both countries-the observed associations between gender, race, age, and marital status and health are considerably weakened after adjusting for SES; 3) psychosocial, behavioural risk and health care access factors are very strong determinants of health in each country, however being severely/morbidly obese, a smoker, or having low life satisfaction has a stronger negative effect on the health of Americans, while being physically inactive or having unmet health care needs has a stronger effect among Canadians; and 4) risk and health care access factors together play a relatively minor role in linking social structural factors to health. Overall, the findings demonstrate the importance of social determinants of health in both countries, and that some determinants matter more in one country relative to the other.
大量研究表明,健康的社会决定因素对加拿大和美国民众的健康有着重大影响。然而,由于历史上缺乏可比的跨国数据,很少有研究直接比较社会因素与两国健康之间的关联程度。本研究使用专门设计用于促进比较健康研究的联合加拿大/美国健康调查数据,考察了广泛的社会决定因素对两国人群自评健康的影响差异。研究结果表明:1)社会人口学和社会经济学因素对两国的健康都有重大影响,但影响的大小往往不同——性别、出生地和种族对美国人的健康影响更大,而年龄和婚姻状况对加拿大健康的影响更大;加拿大的健康收入梯度更陡峭,而美国的健康教育梯度更陡峭;2)社会经济地位(SES)在两国都调节或连接社会人口变量与健康——在调整 SES 后,观察到的性别、种族、年龄和婚姻状况与健康之间的关联大大减弱;3)心理社会、行为风险和医疗保健获取因素是两国健康的非常重要的决定因素,然而,严重/病态肥胖、吸烟或生活满意度低对美国人的健康有更强的负面影响,而身体不活动或医疗保健需求未得到满足对加拿大人的健康有更强的影响;4)风险和医疗保健获取因素在将社会结构因素与健康联系起来方面只起相对较小的作用。总的来说,这些发现表明了社会决定因素在两国健康中的重要性,并且某些决定因素在一个国家比在另一个国家更为重要。