Ki Myung, Lee Yo Han, Kim Yong-Soo, Shin Ji-Yeon, Lim Jiseun, Nazroo James
Department of Preventive Medicine, Korea University College of Medicine, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Konyang University College of Medicine, Daejeon, South Korea.
PLoS One. 2017 Mar 15;12(3):e0173770. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0173770. eCollection 2017.
Socioeconomic inequalities in health are commonly known to decrease at late age. Yet, it remains unclear whether socioeconomic inequalities in health at late age appear in relation to multimorbidity, particularly in Korea where social support remains unsatisfactory for older people. Using three waves of Korea Health Panel, data of 19,942 observations with repeated measure were constructed to ensure a temporal sequence between three socioeconomic measures (i.e., poverty, employment status, and education) and multimorbidity with a t to t+1 year transition. A multilevel multinomial model was applied to quantify the socioeconomic impact across different age, diseases and disease groups, both separately and in combination. There were associations between socioeconomic position (SEP) and multimorbidity, and increasing trends of socioeconomic inequalities not only with greater number of morbidity but also with age. The latter result was only observed with employment status through mid-to-early old age; i.e., between the 40s (odds ratio (OR) = 2.45, 95% confidence interval (CI):1.08-5.57) and 70s (OR = 3.48, 95%CI: 1.24-9.74). The patterns of socioeconomic inequalities in multimorbidity varied for particular pairs of diseases and were stronger in the disease pairs co-occurring with mental and cardiovascular diseases but weaker in the disease pairs co-occurring with cancer. Accumulation of adversity tended to intensify with increase in number of diseases and older age, though this finding was not consistently supported. The labour market should be encouraged to actively participate in actions to promote healthy aging needs to be complemented by the provision of more generous and universal income support to the elderly in Korea.
健康方面的社会经济不平等通常在老年时会减少。然而,老年时健康方面的社会经济不平等是否与多种疾病并存有关仍不清楚,尤其是在韩国,那里对老年人的社会支持仍然不尽人意。利用韩国健康面板的三轮数据,构建了19942个具有重复测量值的观测数据,以确保三种社会经济指标(即贫困、就业状况和教育程度)与多种疾病并存之间的时间顺序,时间跨度为t到t + 1年。应用多层次多项模型分别和综合量化不同年龄、疾病和疾病组的社会经济影响。社会经济地位(SEP)与多种疾病并存之间存在关联。社会经济不平等不仅随着发病率的增加而增加,而且随着年龄增长而呈上升趋势。后一个结果仅在中年到老年的就业状况中观察到,即40多岁(优势比(OR) = 2.45,95%置信区间(CI):1.08 - 5.57)到70多岁(OR = 3.48,95%CI:1.24 - 9.74)之间。多种疾病并存情况下社会经济不平等的模式因特定疾病对而异,在与精神和心血管疾病同时出现的疾病对中更强,但在与癌症同时出现的疾病对中较弱。尽管这一发现并非始终得到支持,但逆境积累往往随着疾病数量的增加和年龄的增长而加剧。韩国应鼓励劳动力市场积极参与促进健康老龄化的行动,同时需要为老年人提供更慷慨和普遍的收入支持作为补充。