Perelman Julian
NOVA National School of Public Health. Comprehensive Health Research Center. Universidade NOVA de Lisboa. Lisboa. Portugal.
Acta Med Port. 2022 Jun 1;35(6):433-449. doi: 10.20344/amp.16031. Epub 2022 May 9.
International evidence has unveiled the existence of social inequalities in the risk of death associated with SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19). In Portugal, the impossibility to identify the socioeconomic condition of deceased people hinders this evaluation. This study analyzes the social inequalities in the risk factors of COVID-19 mortality in Portugal.
We used data from the sixth National Health Survey, carried out between September 2019 and December 2019, for the subgroup of people aged between 25 and 79 years old (n = 12 052). We considered the comorbidities with demonstrated link to COVID-19 mortality: asthma, chronic bronchitis, cardiovascular (CVD) and cerebrovascular disease, diabetes, hypertension, chronic renal disease (CRD), and obesity. The inequality, stratified by sex, was measured in terms of education and income, using logistic regression (odds ratios and relative index of inequality).
Compared to men with the lowest level of formal education, we measured a risk reduction, among men with tertiary education, of CVD (-90%), chronic bronchitis (-75%), stroke (-70%), diabetes (-62%), hypertension (-41%), and obesity (-43%). Among tertiaryeducated women, we observed a reduced risk of CRD (-77%), hypertension, diabetes, stroke (-70%), obesity (-64%), and CVD (-55%). Except for obesity among men, the risk of disease was always significantly lower in the highest income quintile, compared with the lowest.
In 2019, we observed socioeconomic inequalities of high magnitude for the eight diseases with demonstrated link to COVID-19 mortality.
国际证据揭示了与严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒2(COVID-19)相关的死亡风险中存在社会不平等现象。在葡萄牙,无法确定死者的社会经济状况阻碍了这一评估。本研究分析了葡萄牙COVID-19死亡风险因素中的社会不平等现象。
我们使用了2019年9月至2019年12月期间进行的第六次全国健康调查中25至79岁人群亚组的数据(n = 12052)。我们考虑了与COVID-19死亡率有明确关联的合并症:哮喘、慢性支气管炎、心血管疾病(CVD)和脑血管疾病、糖尿病、高血压、慢性肾病(CRD)和肥胖症。通过逻辑回归(优势比和不平等相对指数),按性别分层,根据教育程度和收入衡量不平等情况。
与正规教育程度最低的男性相比,我们发现受过高等教育的男性患心血管疾病的风险降低了90%,慢性支气管炎降低了75%,中风降低了70%,糖尿病降低了62%,高血压降低了41%,肥胖症降低了43%。在受过高等教育的女性中,我们观察到患慢性肾病的风险降低了77%,高血压、糖尿病、中风降低了70%,肥胖症降低了64%,心血管疾病降低了55%。除男性肥胖症外,最高收入五分位数人群的疾病风险始终显著低于最低收入五分位数人群。
2019年,我们观察到与COVID-19死亡率有明确关联的八种疾病存在高度的社会经济不平等现象。