Int J Equity Health. 2013 Aug 20;12:66. doi: 10.1186/1475-9276-12-66.
In adults, multimorbidity is associated with social position. Socially disadvantaged adults typically experience more chronic illness at a younger age than comparable individuals who are more advantaged. The relation between social position and multimorbidity amongst children and adolescents has not been as widely studied and is less clear.
The NHS Information Centre (NHS IC) linked participants in the Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC) to the General Practice Research Database (GPRD). Multimorbidity was measured in three different ways: using a count of the number of drugs prescribed, a count of chronic diseases, and a person's predicted resource use score; the latter two measures were derived using the Johns Hopkins ACG system. A number of different socio-economic position variables measured as part of ALSPAC during pregnancy and early childhood were considered. Ordered logistic and negative binomial regression models were used to investigate associations between socio-economic variables and multimorbidity.
After mutually adjusting for the different markers of socio-economic position, there was evidence, albeit weak, that chronic condition counts among children aged from 0 to 9 years were higher among those whose mothers were less well educated (OR = 0.44; 95% confidence interval 0.18-1.10; p = 0.08). Conversely, children whose mothers were better educated had higher rates of chronic illness between 10 and 18 years (OR = 1.94; 95% CI 1.14-3.30). However, living in a more deprived area, as indicated by the Townsend score, was associated with a higher odds of chronic illness between 10 and 18 years (OR for each increasing decile of Townsend score = 1.09; 95% CI 1.00-1.19; p = 0.06).
We have found some evidence that, in younger children, multimorbidity may be higher amongst children whose parents are less well educated. In older children and adolescents this association is less clear. We have also demonstrated that linkage between prospective observational studies and electronic patient records can provide an effective way of obtaining objectively measured outcome variables.
在成年人中,多种疾病与社会地位相关。社会地位较低的成年人通常比社会地位较高的同龄人更早地经历更多的慢性疾病。儿童和青少年的社会地位与多种疾病之间的关系尚未得到广泛研究,因此不太清楚。
NHS 信息中心(NHSIC)将参与阿冯纵向研究父母和儿童(ALSPAC)的参与者与普通实践研究数据库(GPRD)联系起来。多种疾病以三种不同的方式进行测量:使用处方药物数量计数、慢性疾病数量计数和个人预测资源使用评分;后两种测量方法是使用约翰霍普金斯 ACG 系统得出的。考虑了在怀孕期间和儿童早期作为 ALSPAC 的一部分测量的多种不同的社会经济地位变量。使用有序逻辑回归和负二项回归模型来研究社会经济变量与多种疾病之间的关联。
在相互调整了不同的社会经济地位标志物之后,有证据表明,0 至 9 岁儿童的慢性疾病计数在母亲受教育程度较低的儿童中较高(OR=0.44;95%置信区间 0.18-1.10;p=0.08)。相反,母亲受教育程度较高的儿童在 10 至 18 岁之间患有慢性疾病的比率更高(OR=1.94;95%CI 1.14-3.30)。然而,居住在更贫困地区,如汤森得分所表明的,与 10 至 18 岁之间慢性疾病的较高几率相关(每个增加的汤森得分十分位数的 OR=1.09;95%CI 1.00-1.19;p=0.06)。
我们发现了一些证据表明,在年幼的儿童中,父母受教育程度较低的儿童的多种疾病可能更高。在较大的儿童和青少年中,这种关联不太清楚。我们还表明,前瞻性观察研究和电子病历之间的联系可以提供一种获取客观测量结果变量的有效方法。