Department of Physical Therapy, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV, USA.
Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Department of Environmental and Occupational Health, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, Las Vegas, NV, USA.
Prosthet Orthot Int. 2020 Oct;44(5):290-297. doi: 10.1177/0309364620921756. Epub 2020 Jun 2.
Socioeconomic status has been shown to be an important factor in the disparate prevalence and selected treatment of limb loss, but how personal financial difficulty affects patients' health outcomes is currently unclear.
Examining how presence and experience of personal financial difficulty affects perceived health and wellbeing in individuals with lower limb loss.
Cross-sectional study.
A total of 90 participants (68 males, mean age 58.7 ± 16.7 years) were recruited from local physical therapy and prosthetic and orthotic clinics, rehabilitation hospitals, and a regional amputee patient support group. All participants were community-dwelling, non-military adults with amputation involving at least one major lower limb joint. Participants were interviewed, and each completed a survey that included basic demographic/medical information, self-reported health and wellbeing (Short-Form Health Survey, SF-36v2), and a question to determine their financial situation after limb loss. Multiple regression analyses were used to examine the effect of financial difficulty on the eight subscales of SF-36v2 while accounting for age, gender, and amputation level.
Experiencing financial difficulty significantly and negatively affected Role-Physical and Role-Emotional subscale scores ( < 0.01 and = 0.02, respectively). Individuals with financial difficulty scored approximately 60% lower in these two specific subscales.
Experiencing financial difficulty is a significant predictor for diminished work or daily activity participation due to physical and emotional stresses. Clinicians and health policy makers need to understand how socioeconomic factors may prevent individuals with lower limb loss from achieving higher levels of functional recovery and community re-integration after amputation.
Our findings showed that presence or experience of financial difficulty was significantly associated with diminished community re-integration in community-dwelling, non-military adults with lower limb loss. It affects both physical and emotional aspects of wellbeing. Clinicians should be aware how socioeconomic factors may affect social re-integration after amputation.
社会经济地位已被证明是肢体丧失患病率和特定治疗差异的重要因素,但个人经济困难如何影响患者的健康结果尚不清楚。
研究个人经济困难的存在和经历如何影响下肢丧失患者的健康感知和幸福感。
横断面研究。
共招募了 90 名参与者(68 名男性,平均年龄 58.7±16.7 岁),他们来自当地的物理治疗和假肢矫形诊所、康复医院和一个区域截肢患者支持小组。所有参与者均为居住在社区、非军人的成年人,截肢涉及至少一个主要下肢关节。对参与者进行访谈,并让他们完成一项调查,包括基本的人口统计学/医疗信息、自我报告的健康和幸福感(简明健康调查量表,SF-36v2),以及一个确定他们在肢体丧失后财务状况的问题。使用多元回归分析来检查财务困难对 SF-36v2 的八个子量表的影响,同时考虑年龄、性别和截肢水平。
经历财务困难显著且负面地影响了角色身体和角色情感子量表的评分(<0.01 和=0.02)。有财务困难的个体在这两个特定子量表中的得分约低 60%。
经历财务困难是由于身体和情绪压力导致工作或日常活动参与减少的重要预测因素。临床医生和卫生政策制定者需要了解社会经济因素如何可能阻止下肢丧失患者在截肢后实现更高水平的功能恢复和社区重新融入。
我们的研究结果表明,经济困难的存在或经历与居住在社区、非军人的下肢丧失成年人的社区重新融入程度下降显著相关。它影响了健康的身体和情感方面。临床医生应该意识到社会经济因素如何影响截肢后的社会重新融入。