Wallace Lindsay M K, Theou Olga, Pena Fernando, Rockwood Kenneth, Andrew Melissa K
Division Geriatric Medicine, Department of Medicine, Dalhousie University, 5955 Veterans' Memorial Lane, Halifax, NS, B3H 2E1, Canada.
Aging Clin Exp Res. 2015 Jun;27(3):365-72. doi: 10.1007/s40520-014-0271-6. Epub 2014 Sep 12.
Social factors are important for health; the concept of social vulnerability considers them holistically and can be quantified using a social vulnerability index (SVI).
Investigate the SVI in relation to mortality and disability, independent of frailty, in middle-aged and older European adults, and examine how this relationship differs across countries.
18,289 community-dwelling participants 50 years and older from SHARE wave 1 (2004) were included in our sample. A 32-item SVI and a 57-item frailty index were calculated for individuals as the proportion of deficits present out of the total number considered. Countries were grouped based on their social model: Nordic (Denmark, Netherlands, Sweden), Continental (France, Austria, Belgium, Germany) and Mediterranean (Greece, Italy, Spain). Outcome measures were 5-year mortality and disability (≥1 dependency with activities of daily living) at wave 4 (2011-2012).
High social vulnerability (highest quartile) predicted mortality (HR = 1.25, 95 % CI 1.07-1.45), and disability (OR = 1.36, 95 % CI 1.15-1.62) after controlling for age, sex, baseline disability and frailty level. When analyses were split by social model, social vulnerability remained a significant predictor of mortality for Continental (HR = 1.36, CI 1.05-1.77) and Mediterranean (HR = 1.33, CI 1.03-1.72) countries, but not the Nordic (HR = 1.02, CI 0.76-1.37) countries; the same pattern was observed for disability (Nordic OR = 1.06, CI 0.72-1.55; Continental OR = 1.53, CI 1.20-1.96; Mediterranean OR = 1.58, CI 1.13-2.23).
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSIONS: Social vulnerability was a significant predictor of mortality and disability, though when controlling for frailty, this relationship varied by the social model of the country.
社会因素对健康很重要;社会脆弱性概念全面地考虑了这些因素,并且可以使用社会脆弱性指数(SVI)进行量化。
调查欧洲中老年成年人中与死亡率和残疾相关的社会脆弱性指数,独立于虚弱因素,并研究这种关系在不同国家之间如何不同。
我们的样本纳入了来自SHARE第一轮(2004年)的18289名50岁及以上的社区居民参与者。为个体计算了一个包含32个项目的社会脆弱性指数和一个包含57个项目的虚弱指数,计算方法为存在的缺陷数量占所考虑总数的比例。根据社会模式对国家进行分组:北欧国家(丹麦、荷兰、瑞典)、大陆国家(法国、奥地利、比利时、德国)和地中海国家(希腊、意大利、西班牙)。结局指标为第4轮(2011 - 2012年)时的5年死亡率和残疾情况(日常生活活动中至少有一项依赖)。
在控制了年龄、性别、基线残疾和虚弱水平后,高社会脆弱性(最高四分位数)预测了死亡率(风险比[HR]=1.25,95%置信区间[CI]为1.07 - 1.45)和残疾情况(比值比[OR]=1.36,95%CI为1.15 - 1.62)。当按社会模式进行分析时,社会脆弱性仍然是大陆国家(HR = 1.36,CI为1.05 - 1.77)和地中海国家(HR = 1.33,CI为1.03 - 1.72)死亡率的显著预测因素,但不是北欧国家(HR = 1.02,CI为0.76 - 1.37)的;残疾情况也观察到相同模式(北欧国家OR = 1.06,CI为0.72 - 1.55;大陆国家OR = 1.53,CI为1.20 - 1.96;地中海国家OR = 1.58,CI为1.13 - 2.23)。
讨论/结论:社会脆弱性是死亡率和残疾情况的显著预测因素,不过在控制了虚弱因素后,这种关系因国家的社会模式而异。