School of Economics, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China.
School of Economics and Management, Beihang University, Beijing 100083, China.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2019 Jan 14;16(2):215. doi: 10.3390/ijerph16020215.
Previous studies have shown there are no consistent and robust associations between socioeconomic status and morbidity rates. This study focuses on the relationship between the socioeconomic status and the morbidity rates in China, which helps to add new evidence for the fragmentary relationship between socioeconomic status and morbidity rates. The (NHSS) and (CHARLS) data are used to examine whether the association holds in both all-age cohorts and in older only cohorts. Three morbidity outcomes (two-week incidence rate, the prevalence of chronic diseases, and the number of sick days per thousand people) and two socioeconomic status indicators (income and education) are mainly examined. The results indicate that there are quadratic relationships between income per capita and morbidities. This non-linear correlation is similar to the patterns in European countries. Meanwhile, there is no association between education years and the morbidity in China, i.e., either two-week incidence rate or prevalence rate of chronic diseases has no statistically significant relationship with the education level in China.
先前的研究表明,社会经济地位与发病率之间没有一致和稳健的关联。本研究聚焦于中国社会经济地位与发病率之间的关系,为社会经济地位与发病率之间零碎的关系增添新的证据。使用中国健康与养老追踪调查(CHARLS)和中国健康与营养调查(NHSS)的数据来检验这种关联在全年龄队列和仅老年队列中是否成立。主要考察了三种发病率结果(两周发病率、慢性病患病率和每千人病假天数)和两个社会经济地位指标(收入和教育)。结果表明,人均收入与发病率之间存在二次关系。这种非线性相关性与欧洲国家的模式相似。同时,在中国,教育年限与发病率之间没有关联,即两周发病率或慢性病患病率与中国的教育水平没有统计学上显著的关系。