Economics of Tobacco Control Project, South African Labour and Development Research Unit (SAL-DRU), School of Economics, University of Cape Town, Rondebosch, South Africa.
Int J Equity Health. 2017 Jun 19;16(1):103. doi: 10.1186/s12939-017-0598-7.
Many low- and middle-income countries are experiencing an epidemiological transition from communicable to non-communicable diseases. This has negative consequences for their human capital development, and imposes a growing economic burden on their societies. While the prevalence of such diseases varies with socioeconomic status, the inequalities can be exacerbated by adopted lifestyles of individuals. Evidence suggests that lifestyle factors may explain the income-related inequality in self-reported health. Self-reported health is a subjective evaluation of people's general health status rather than an objective measure of lifestyle-related ill-health.
The objective of this paper is to expand the literature by examining the contribution of smoking and alcohol consumption to health inequalities, incorporating more objective measures of health, that are directly associated with these lifestyle practices. We used the National Income Dynamic Study panel data for South Africa. The corrected concentration index is used to measure inequalities in health outcomes. We use a decomposition technique to identify the contribution of smoking and alcohol use to inequalities in health.
We find significant smoking-related and income-related inequalities in both self-reported and lifestyle-related ill-health. The results suggest that smoking and alcohol use contribute positively to income-related inequality in health. Smoking participation accounts for up to 7.35% of all measured inequality in health and 3.11% of the inequality in self-reported health. The estimates are generally higher for all measured inequality in health (up to 14.67%) when smoking duration is considered. Alcohol consumption accounts for 27.83% of all measured inequality in health and 3.63% of the inequality in self-reported health.
This study provides evidence that inequalities in both self-reported and lifestyle-related ill-health are highly prevalent within smokers and the poor. These inequalities need to be explicitly addressed in future programme planning to reduce health inequalities in South Africa. We suggest that policies that can influence poor individuals to reduce tobacco consumption and harmful alcohol use will improve their health and reduce health inequalities.
许多中低收入国家正经历着从传染病向非传染性疾病的流行病学转变。这对它们的人力资本发展产生了负面影响,并给它们的社会带来了日益增长的经济负担。虽然这些疾病的患病率因社会经济地位而异,但个人所采用的生活方式可能会加剧不平等现象。有证据表明,生活方式因素可能解释了自评健康与收入相关的不平等现象。自评健康是人们对总体健康状况的主观评价,而不是与生活方式相关的健康不良的客观衡量标准。
本文的目的是通过检查吸烟和饮酒对健康不平等的贡献来扩展文献,纳入与这些生活方式实践直接相关的更客观的健康衡量标准。我们使用了南非国家收入动态研究小组的数据。使用校正后的集中指数来衡量健康结果的不平等。我们使用分解技术来确定吸烟和饮酒对健康不平等的贡献。
我们发现自评健康和生活方式相关不良健康状况都存在显著的与吸烟相关和与收入相关的不平等现象。结果表明,吸烟和饮酒对健康与收入相关的不平等有积极贡献。吸烟参与度占健康所有衡量不平等的 7.35%,占自评健康不平等的 3.11%。当考虑吸烟持续时间时,所有衡量健康不平等的估计值(高达 14.67%)通常更高。饮酒占健康所有衡量不平等的 27.83%,占自评健康不平等的 3.63%。
本研究提供的证据表明,在吸烟者和穷人中,自评健康和与生活方式相关的不良健康状况的不平等现象非常普遍。在未来的规划中,需要明确解决这些不平等现象,以减少南非的健康不平等。我们建议,能够影响贫困人口减少烟草消费和有害饮酒的政策将改善他们的健康状况并减少健康不平等。