Department of Sociology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Institute of Health and Society, Department of General Practice, Faculty of Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Eur J Public Health. 2018 Feb 1;28(1):30-34. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckx119.
The Nordic 'health paradox' designates the seemingly puzzling empirical reality in which, despite the presence of strong welfare policies targeting structural inequalities, distinct health disparities persist in Scandinavian societies. In Norway, previous research has shown that inequalities in diabetes prevalence are particularly salient, notably between ethnic groups. These have often been attributed to lifestyle, socioeconomic factors, or genetics. No previous research has sought to investigate the sociospatial mediation of diabetes inequities.
In this article, we examine the social geography of diabetes in Oslo to examine whether the link between ethnicity and diabetes is confounded by place. We use data from the 2002 Oslo Health Study (n = 17 325) to fit logistic regression models, assessing whether contextual factors, such as the concentration of fast food outlets, predict self-reported diabetes outcomes after controlling for relevant individual level covariates. We also test for spatial autocorrelation in the geographical distribution of diabetes.
The findings suggest that the organisation of urban space and the spatial distribution of health-related resources exert an independent effect on diabetes prevalence, controlling for ethnicity and other covariates. Living on the east side of Oslo increases the odds of suffering from diabetes by almost 60%, whilst living in a neighbourhood characterized by a relative concentration of fast food and relative absence of healthy food shops and physical exercise facilities increases the odds by 30%.
Spatial context and toxic environments contribute to diabetes inequalities in Oslo, Norway. Future research and policy-making should take the geography of health disparities into account.
北欧的“健康悖论”指出了一个看似令人费解的经验现实,即在存在针对结构性不平等的强有力福利政策的情况下,斯堪的纳维亚社会中仍然存在明显的健康差距。在挪威,先前的研究表明,糖尿病患病率方面的不平等尤为突出,特别是在族裔群体之间。这些不平等现象通常归因于生活方式、社会经济因素或遗传因素。以前没有研究试图调查糖尿病不平等现象的社会空间调解。
在本文中,我们研究了奥斯陆的糖尿病社会地理学,以检验种族与糖尿病之间的联系是否因地点而混淆。我们使用了 2002 年奥斯陆健康研究(n = 17325)的数据来拟合逻辑回归模型,评估诸如快餐店集中等环境因素是否在控制了相关个体水平协变量后,预测自我报告的糖尿病结果。我们还测试了糖尿病地理分布的空间自相关。
研究结果表明,城市空间的组织和与健康相关的资源的空间分布对糖尿病患病率具有独立影响,控制了种族和其他协变量。居住在奥斯陆东侧会使患糖尿病的几率增加近 60%,而居住在以快餐店相对集中且缺乏健康食品店和体育锻炼设施为特征的社区中,会使患病几率增加 30%。
空间背景和有毒环境导致了挪威奥斯陆的糖尿病不平等现象。未来的研究和决策应该考虑健康差距的地理因素。