Department of Economics and Centre for Modern Indian Studies, University of Göttingen, Göttingen, Germany.
United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), West and Central Africa Regional Office, Dakar, Senegal.
J Glob Health. 2021 Aug 10;11:13009. doi: 10.7189/jogh.11.13009. eCollection 2021.
While the prevalence of childhood diseases and related mortality have been decreasing over the past decades, progress has been unequally distributed. The poorest households often carry the highest disease burden. As morbidity and mortality also decline most slowly among children of the poorest households, socioeconomic status may become a more relevant risk factor for childhood diseases.
We analysed the association between socioeconomic status and highly prevalent childhood diseases, specifically diarrhoea, acute respiratory infections (ARI), and malaria, and how this association changed over time. For this observational study, we used repeated cross-sectional data, namely all available Demographic and Health Surveys as well as Multi-Indicator Cluster Surveys from Western and Central Africa between 1995 and 2017. We estimated the predicted prevalence of each disease for the entire region in three time periods. We repeated the analysis separately for each country to highlight heterogeneity between countries.
A notable wealth gradient can be seen in the prevalence rates of diarrhoea, ARI, and malaria in Western and Central Africa. Children in the poorest quartile have a much higher morbidity than children in the richest quartile and have experienced a considerably slower decline in prevalence rates. In the period 2010-2017, predicted prevalence of diarrhoea was 17.5% for children in the poorest quartile and 12.5% for children in the richest quartile. Similarly, the predicted prevalence was 11.1% and 8.6% for ARI, and 54.1% and 24.4% for malaria in endemic countries. The pattern does not differ between boys and girls. While exact prevalence rates vary between countries, only few countries have seen a decline in the wealth gradient for childhood diseases.
The increasing wealth gradient in health raises concerns of increasing inequality that goes beyond wealth. It suggests a need to further improve targeting of health programmes. Moreover, these programmes should be adapted to address the interlinked challenges which burden the poorest households.
尽管过去几十年来儿童疾病的发病率和相关死亡率一直在下降,但进展并不均衡。最贫困的家庭往往承受着最高的疾病负担。由于最贫困家庭的儿童发病率和死亡率下降最慢,社会经济地位可能成为儿童疾病的一个更相关的风险因素。
我们分析了社会经济地位与高发病率的儿童疾病(特别是腹泻、急性呼吸道感染和疟疾)之间的关联,以及这种关联随时间的变化。在这项观察性研究中,我们使用了重复的横断面数据,即 1995 年至 2017 年间来自西非和中非的所有现有人口与健康调查和多指标类集调查。我们为整个地区的三个时期估计了每种疾病的预测患病率。我们分别对每个国家进行了分析,以突出国家之间的异质性。
在西非和中非,腹泻、急性呼吸道感染和疟疾的发病率存在显著的财富梯度。最贫困四分之一的儿童发病率比最富裕四分之一的儿童高得多,而且发病率的下降速度也慢得多。在 2010-2017 年期间,最贫困四分之一的儿童腹泻预测患病率为 17.5%,最富裕四分之一的儿童为 12.5%。同样,急性呼吸道感染的预测患病率为 11.1%和 8.6%,疟疾在流行地区的预测患病率为 54.1%和 24.4%。这种模式在男孩和女孩之间没有区别。虽然确切的发病率在各国之间有所不同,但只有少数国家看到了儿童疾病贫富差距的缩小。
健康方面的财富梯度不断扩大令人担忧,这表明不平等现象正在加剧,而且超出了财富的范畴。这表明需要进一步改进卫生方案的针对性。此外,这些方案应适应解决困扰最贫困家庭的相互关联的挑战。