Department of Medicine, Division of Nephrology, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
Center for Advancing Population Science, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, WI, USA.
BMC Nephrol. 2021 Feb 28;22(1):76. doi: 10.1186/s12882-021-02277-2.
A growing body of evidence supports the potential role of social determinants of health on health outcomes. However, few studies have examined the cumulative effect of social determinants of health on health outcomes in adults with chronic kidney disease (CKD) with or without diabetes. This study examined the cumulative impact of social determinants of health on mortality in U.S. adults with CKD and diabetes.
We analyzed data from National Health and Nutrition Examination Surveys (2005-2014) for 1376 adults age 20 and older (representing 7,579,967 U.S. adults) with CKD and diabetes. The primary outcome was all-cause mortality. CKD was based on estimated glomerular filtration rate and albuminuria. Diabetes was based on self-report or Hemoglobin A1c of ≥6.5%. Social determinants of health measures included family income to poverty ratio level, depression based on PHQ-9 score and food insecurity based on Food Security Survey Module. A dichotomous social determinant measure (absence vs presence of ≥1 adverse social determinants) and a cumulative social determinant score ranging from 0 to 3 was constructed based on all three measures. Cox proportional models were used to estimate the association between social determinants of health factors and mortality while controlling for covariates.
Cumulative and dichotomous social determinants of health score were significantly associated with mortality after adjusting for demographics, lifestyle variables, glycemic control and comorbidities (HR = 1.41, 95%CI 1.18-1.68 and HR = 1.41, 95%CI 1.08-1.84, respectively). When investigating social determinants of health variables separately, after adjusting for covariates, depression (HR = 1.52, 95%CI 1.10-1.83) was significantly and independently associated with mortality, however, poverty and food insecurity were not statistically significant.
Specific social determinants of health factors such as depression increase mortality in adults with chronic kidney disease and diabetes. Our findings suggest that interventions are needed to address adverse determinants of health in this population.
越来越多的证据支持健康的社会决定因素对健康结果的潜在作用。然而,很少有研究调查健康的社会决定因素对患有或不患有糖尿病的慢性肾脏病 (CKD) 成人健康结果的累积影响。本研究探讨了健康的社会决定因素对美国 CKD 合并糖尿病成人死亡率的累积影响。
我们分析了 2005-2014 年全国健康和营养调查 (NHANES) 中 1376 名年龄在 20 岁及以上(代表 7579967 名美国成年人)患有 CKD 和糖尿病的成年人的数据。主要结局是全因死亡率。CKD 基于估计肾小球滤过率和白蛋白尿。糖尿病基于自我报告或血红蛋白 A1c≥6.5%。健康的社会决定因素测量包括家庭收入贫困比水平、基于 PHQ-9 评分的抑郁和基于食品安全调查模块的食物不安全。根据所有三项测量结果,构建了一个二分类社会决定因素测量(是否存在≥1 个不利社会决定因素)和一个 0 到 3 分的累积社会决定因素评分。使用 Cox 比例模型估计健康的社会决定因素与死亡率之间的关联,同时控制协变量。
在调整人口统计学、生活方式变量、血糖控制和合并症后,累积和二分类健康的社会决定因素评分与死亡率显著相关(HR=1.41,95%CI 1.18-1.68 和 HR=1.41,95%CI 1.08-1.84)。分别调查健康的社会决定因素变量时,在调整协变量后,抑郁(HR=1.52,95%CI 1.10-1.83)与死亡率显著相关,而贫困和食物不安全则无统计学意义。
特定的健康的社会决定因素,如抑郁,会增加患有慢性肾脏病和糖尿病的成年人的死亡率。我们的研究结果表明,需要针对该人群的健康不良决定因素进行干预。