Department of Rheumatology , Maastricht University Medical Center , CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary care, Maastricht , The Netherlands ; Department of Health Promotion, Maastricht University , CAPHRI School for Public Health and Primary care , Maastricht , The Netherlands.
Clinical Immunology & Rheumatology, Amsterdam Rheumatology Center , Amsterdam , The Netherlands ; Department of Rheumatology , Hospital Garcia de Orta , Almada , Portugal.
RMD Open. 2015 May 21;1(1):e000045. doi: 10.1136/rmdopen-2014-000045. eCollection 2015.
To explore the impact of socioeconomic factors on physical and mental health of patients with musculoskeletal disorders (MSKDs) and compare it across patients with other disorders.
A representative sample of the Dutch population (n=8904) completed a survey on sociodemographics, physician-diagnosed (co-) morbidities, and physical (physical component summary, PCS) and mental (mental component summary, MCS) subscales of SF-12 (outcome variables). Regression models were computed first in the total group of patients with MSKDs, with education, age, gender, origin and place of residence as independent variables, and, second, in individuals expected to have paid work, adding a variable on social status. Models were repeated for five other subgroups of chronic disorders (cardiovascular (CVD), diabetes, cancer, mental and respiratory) and for healthy individuals.
MSKDs confirmed by a physician were reported by 1766 (20%) participants (mean age 59 years, 38% male), 547 (6%) respondents reported to have diabetes, 1855 (21%) CVD, 270 (3%) cancer, 526 (6%) mental disorders, 679 (8%) respiratory disorders and 4525 (51%) did not report any disease. In patients with MSKDs, (primary school vs university education (-5.3 (PCS) and -3.3 (MCS)) and having a state subsidy vs paid work (-5.3 (PCS) and -4.7 (MCS)) were consistently associated with worse physical and mental health. Gender was only relevant for PCS (female vs male -2.1). Comparable differences in health by education and social status were observed in the other diseases, except for cancer.
Education and social status in MSKD have the same strong and independent association with health as in other chronic diseases. These health gradients are unfair and partly avoidable, and require consorted attention and action in and outside healthcare.
探讨社会经济因素对肌肉骨骼疾病(MSKD)患者身心健康的影响,并与其他疾病患者进行比较。
对荷兰代表性人群(n=8904)进行了一项关于社会人口统计学、医生诊断(共)合并症以及 SF-12 的身体(身体成分综合评分,PCS)和心理(心理成分综合评分,MCS)子量表的调查。首先,在 MSKD 患者的总人群中计算了回归模型,将教育、年龄、性别、原籍和居住地作为自变量,并在预期有带薪工作的个体中添加社会地位变量,其次进行了计算。模型在其他五种慢性疾病(心血管疾病(CVD)、糖尿病、癌症、精神和呼吸)和健康个体中重复进行。
1766 名(20%)参与者报告了经医生确诊的 MSKD(平均年龄 59 岁,38%为男性),547 名(6%)报告患有糖尿病,1855 名(21%)患有 CVD,270 名(3%)患有癌症,526 名(6%)患有精神障碍,679 名(8%)患有呼吸障碍,4525 名(51%)未报告任何疾病。在 MSKD 患者中,(小学与大学教育(PCS 分别为-5.3 和-3.3,MCS 分别为-3.3 和-3.3)和领取国家补贴与带薪工作(PCS 分别为-5.3 和-4.7,MCS 分别为-4.7 和-4.7)与身心健康状况较差始终相关。性别仅与 PCS 相关(女性比男性低 2.1)。除癌症外,在其他疾病中也观察到了类似的教育和社会地位与健康之间的差异。
在 MSKD 中,教育和社会地位与健康的关联与其他慢性疾病一样强且独立。这些健康梯度是不公平的,在一定程度上是可以避免的,需要在医疗保健内外共同关注和采取行动。