Marshall Alan, Nazroo James, Feeney Kevin, Lee Jinkook, Vanhoutte Bram, Pendleton Neil
Department of Geography and Sustainable Development, University of St Andrews, St Andrews, Fife, UK.
Cathie Marsh Institute for Social Research, University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2016 Mar;70(3):264-70. doi: 10.1136/jech-2014-205336. Epub 2015 Nov 23.
The USA and England have very different health systems. Comparing hypertension care outcomes in each country enables an evaluation of the effectiveness of each system.
The English Longitudinal Study of Ageing and the Health and Retirement Survey are used to compare the prevalence of controlled, uncontrolled and undiagnosed hypertension within the hypertensive population (diagnosed or measured within the survey data used) aged 50 years and above in the USA and in England.
Controlled hypertension is more prevalent within the hypertensive population in the USA (age 50-64: 0.53 (0.50 to 0.57) and age 65+: 0.51 (0.49 to 0.53)) than in England (age 50-64: 0.45 (0.42 to 0.48) and age 65+: 0.42 (0.40 to 0.45)). This difference is driven by lower undiagnosed hypertension in the USA (age 50-64: 0.18 (0.15-0.21) and age 65+: 0.13 (0.12 to 0.14)) relative to England (age 50-64: 0.26 (0.24 to 0.29) and age 65+: 0.22 (0.20 to 0.24)). The prevalence of uncontrolled hypertension within the hypertensive population is very similar in the USA (age 50-64: 0.29 (0.26 to 0.32) and age 65+: 0.36 (0.34 to 0.38)) and England (age 50-64: 0.29 (0.26 to 0.32) and age 65+: 0.36 (0.34 to 0.39)). Hypertension care outcomes are comparable across US insurance categories. In both countries, undiagnosed hypertension is positively correlated with wealth (ages 50-64). Uncontrolled hypertension declines with rising wealth in the USA.
Different diagnostic practices are likely to drive the cross-country differences in undiagnosed hypertension. US government health systems perform at least as well as private healthcare and are more equitable in the distribution of care outcomes. Higher undiagnosed hypertension among the affluent may reflect less frequent medical contact.
美国和英国拥有截然不同的医疗体系。比较两国的高血压护理结果有助于评估每个体系的有效性。
利用英国老龄化纵向研究和健康与退休调查,比较美国和英国50岁及以上高血压人群(在调查数据中被诊断或测量出)中血压得到控制、未得到控制及未被诊断出高血压的患病率。
在美国高血压人群中,血压得到控制的情况比英国更为普遍(50 - 64岁:0.53(0.50至0.57),65岁及以上:0.51(0.49至0.53)),而英国相应年龄段分别为0.45(0.42至0.48)和0.42(0.40至0.45)。这种差异是由于美国未被诊断出高血压的情况相对英国较少(50 - 64岁:0.18(0.15 - 0.21),65岁及以上:0.13(0.12至0.14)),而英国相应年龄段分别为0.26(0.24至0.29)和0.22(0.20至0.24)。在美国和英国高血压人群中,未得到控制的高血压患病率非常相似(50 - 64岁:美国为0.29(0.26至0.32),英国为0.29(0.26至0.32);65岁及以上:美国为0.36(0.34至0.38),英国为0.36(0.34至0.39))。美国不同保险类别的高血压护理结果具有可比性。在两国,未被诊断出的高血压与财富呈正相关(50 - 64岁)。在美国,未得到控制的高血压随着财富增加而下降。
不同的诊断方法可能导致未被诊断出的高血压存在跨国差异。美国政府医疗体系的表现至少与私人医疗保健相当,并且在护理结果的分配上更加公平。富裕人群中未被诊断出的高血压比例较高可能反映出他们就医频率较低。