Djerboua Maya, Chen Bingshu E, Davison Colleen M
Department of Public Health Sciences, Queen's University, 62 Fifth Field Company Lane, Kingston, ON, K7L 3 N6, Canada.
Clinical Research Centre, Kingston General Hospital, Kingston, ON, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2016 Feb 29;16:199. doi: 10.1186/s12889-016-2886-3.
Physical fighting is an assaultive behaviour that can lead to injury. Family affluence is a health determinant that can influence injury. This study examines the relationship between family affluence and two outcomes: physical fighting and fighting-related injury in Canadian adolescents. Three measurements were used to represent family affluence and assess whether these measures demonstrated different associations with these outcomes.
Canadian data from the 2009/2010 Health Behaviour in School-aged Children Study were used. It consists of a nationally representative sample of 26,078 grade 6-10 students. A subset analysis of 10,429 grade 9-10 students was conducted to account for additional confounders. Modified Poisson regression was used to compare the risk of physical fighting and fighting-related injury in youth from different levels of family affluence. Three indicators were used to represent family affluence: self-perceived affluence, a family affluence scale (FAS), and area-level average household income.
The overall prevalence was 35.6% for physical fighting and 2.7% for fighting-related injuries. Both outcomes were more frequent in males than females. An inverse gradient was present where risk for both outcomes increased with decreasing levels of affluence irrespective of the affluence measurement. The self-perceived affluence variable showed a significantly stronger gradient in girls than boys for both outcomes. For both outcomes, FAS showed a similar inverse gradient within females, but a threshold effect in males where there was a strong effect in the low FAS group, but a null effect in the moderate FAS group. The area-level income variable presented a significantly higher likelihood for physical fighting only in females (p = 0.001-0.075). For fighting-related injury, none of the area-level income models showed significant risk estimates with the exception of the bivariate association where low income females were twice as likely to report a fighting-related injury compared to higher income groups (p = 0.030). Post hoc power calculations indicate that there was not sufficient power to detect injury effects associated with the area level income measure.
It appears that a socioeconomic gradient exists where lower affluence is associated with a higher risk of reporting a physical fight and fighting-related injury irrespective of the measure used. While the patterns were generally the same with all three measurements, the strength of this gradient varied across measures. This demonstrates that each indicator may measure different aspects of affluence. Further analyses are needed to explore concepts and mechanisms underlying each affluence measure.
肢体冲突是一种攻击性的行为,可能会导致受伤。家庭富裕程度是一种能够影响受伤情况的健康决定因素。本研究考察了加拿大青少年中家庭富裕程度与两个结果之间的关系:肢体冲突以及与冲突相关的受伤情况。使用了三种测量方法来代表家庭富裕程度,并评估这些测量方法是否与这些结果呈现出不同的关联。
采用了来自2009/2010年学龄儿童健康行为研究中的加拿大数据。该数据包含一个具有全国代表性的26,078名6至10年级学生的样本。对10,429名9至10年级学生进行了子集分析,以考虑额外的混杂因素。使用修正泊松回归来比较来自不同家庭富裕程度水平的青少年发生肢体冲突以及与冲突相关受伤的风险。使用三个指标来代表家庭富裕程度:自我感知的富裕程度、家庭富裕量表(FAS)以及地区层面的平均家庭收入。
肢体冲突的总体发生率为35.6%,与冲突相关的受伤发生率为2.7%。两种结果在男性中都比女性更常见。存在一种反向梯度,即无论使用何种富裕程度测量方法,随着富裕程度水平的降低,两种结果的风险都会增加。自我感知的富裕程度变量在女孩中对于两种结果都显示出比男孩更强的梯度。对于两种结果,FAS在女性中呈现出类似的反向梯度,但在男性中存在一种阈值效应,即在低FAS组中有强烈影响,但在中等FAS组中无影响。地区层面的收入变量仅在女性中显示出肢体冲突的可能性显著更高(p = 0.001 - 0.075)。对于与冲突相关的受伤情况,除了双变量关联(低收入女性报告与冲突相关受伤的可能性是高收入组的两倍,p = 0.030)外,没有一个地区层面收入模型显示出显著的风险估计。事后功效计算表明,没有足够的功效来检测与地区层面收入测量相关的受伤影响。
似乎存在一种社会经济梯度,即无论使用何种测量方法,较低的富裕程度都与报告肢体冲突以及与冲突相关受伤的较高风险相关。虽然所有三种测量方法的模式总体相同,但这种梯度的强度在不同测量方法之间有所不同。这表明每个指标可能测量了富裕程度的不同方面。需要进一步分析来探索每种富裕程度测量方法背后的概念和机制。