Population Health Research Institute, St George's, University of London, London, UK.
Asthma UK Centre for Applied Research, Centre for Medical Informatics, Usher Institute of Population Health Sciences and Informatics, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Thorax. 2018 Aug;73(8):706-712. doi: 10.1136/thoraxjnl-2017-210714. Epub 2018 May 14.
The UK-wide National Review of Asthma Deaths sought to identify avoidable factors from the high numbers of deaths, but did not examine variation by socioeconomic status (SES) or region.
We used asthma deaths in England over the period 2002-2015 obtained from national deaths registers, summarised by quintiles of Index of Multiple Deprivation (IMD) and Government Office Region. Emergency asthma admissions were obtained from Hospital Episode Statistics for England 2001-2011. The prevalence of asthma was derived from the Health Survey for England 2010. Associations of mortality, admissions and prevalence with IMD quintile and region were estimated cross-sectionally using incidence rate ratios (IRRs) adjusted for age and sex and, where possible, smoking.
Asthma mortality decreased among more deprived groups at younger ages. Among 5-44 year olds, those in the most deprived quintile, mortality was 19% lower than those in the least deprived quintile (IRR 0.81 (95% CI 0.69 to 0.96). In older adults, this pattern was reversed (45-74 years: IRR 1.37 (1.24-1.52), ≥75 years: IRR 1.30 (1.22-1.39)). In 5-44 year olds the inverse trend with asthma mortality contrasted with large positive associations for admissions (IRR 3.34 (3.30-3.38)) and prevalence of severe symptoms (IRR 2.38 (1.70-3.33)). Prevalence trends remained after adjustment for smoking. IRRs for asthma mortality, admissions and prevalence showed significant heterogeneity between English regions.
Despite asthma mortality, emergency admissions and prevalence decreasing over recent decades, England still experiences significant SES and regional variations. The previously undocumented inverse relation between deprivation and mortality in the young requires further investigation.
英国范围内的哮喘死亡国家审查旨在从大量死亡人数中确定可避免的因素,但并未检查社会经济地位(SES)或地区的差异。
我们使用了 2002 年至 2015 年期间从国家死亡登记处获得的英格兰哮喘死亡数据,按多重剥夺指数(IMD)五分位数和政府办公区域进行了汇总。2001 年至 2011 年期间,从英格兰医院住院统计数据中获得了紧急哮喘入院情况。2010 年英国健康调查得出了哮喘的患病率。使用发病率比(IRR),根据年龄和性别进行了调整(在可能的情况下还包括吸烟因素),并对 IMD 五分位数和地区与死亡率、入院率和患病率之间的相关性进行了横断面估计。
在较贫困群体中,哮喘死亡率在较年轻的年龄组中有所下降。在 5-44 岁年龄段,最贫困五分位数的死亡率比最富裕五分位数低 19%(IRR 0.81(95%CI 0.69-0.96))。在年龄较大的成年人中,这种模式发生了逆转(45-74 岁:IRR 1.37(1.24-1.52);≥75 岁:IRR 1.30(1.22-1.39))。在 5-44 岁年龄段,哮喘死亡率的逆趋势与入院率的大幅正相关(IRR 3.34(3.30-3.38))和严重症状的患病率(IRR 2.38(1.70-3.33))形成鲜明对比。在调整吸烟因素后,患病率趋势仍然存在。哮喘死亡率,入院率和患病率的 IRR 显示出英格兰各地区之间存在明显的异质性。
尽管近年来哮喘死亡率,急诊入院率和患病率有所下降,但英格兰仍存在明显的 SES 和地区差异。以前未记录的年轻人中贫困与死亡率之间的反比关系需要进一步研究。