School of Human Nutrition, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Québec, Canada.
School of Human Nutrition, McGill University, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Québec, Canada; Faculté de Médecine, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec, Canada.
Can J Diabetes. 2022 Aug;46(6):569-577. doi: 10.1016/j.jcjd.2022.02.008. Epub 2022 Mar 3.
Low socioeconomic status (SES) may add to the challenges of type 1 diabetes (T1D) management and be an independent risk factor for chronic and acute diabetes complications. Our aim in this study was to evaluate the association between SES and TID management and risk of complications in a universal health-care system using data from a registry of people living with T1D (PWT1D) in Québec, Canada (the BETTER registry).
This study was a cross-sectional analysis describing the association between SES factors (education, income, employment and insurance coverage) and T1D outcomes (glycated hemoglobin [A1C], acute and chronic complications and comorbidities), using chi-square tests and regression analyses (adjusted for diabetes duration, sex, ethnicity and diabetes technology use).
In a sample of 1,333 PWT1D, lower education level was associated with cardiovascular disease (odds ratio [OR], 2.44; p=0.002), depression (OR, 1.56; p=0.020), nephropathy (OR, 2.10; p=0.001) and higher A1C (OR, 1.79; p<0.001). Low-income groups were more likely to report higher A1C (OR, 2.16; p=0.001), retinopathy (OR, 1.84; p=0.038), neuropathy (OR, 1.89; p=0.043), nephropathy (OR, 2.23; p=0.024), severe hypoglycemia (OR, 1.87; p=0.022) and depression (OR, 1.87; p=0.012). Unemployment was associated with retinopathy (OR, 2.37; p=0.009) and neuropathy (OR, 1.96; p=0.035). Diabetic ketoacidosis (OR, 2.81; p=0.001) and neuropathy (OR, 1.67; p=0.020) were more likely to be reported by participants with public insurance.
PWT1D from lower SES, particularly those with low income and low education, were more likely to report T1D-related complications and comorbidities. Further longitudinal investigations are needed to better understand the nature and directionality of these associations.
低社会经济地位(SES)可能会增加 1 型糖尿病(T1D)管理的挑战,并成为慢性和急性糖尿病并发症的独立危险因素。我们在本研究中的目的是使用加拿大魁北克 T1D 患者登记处(BETTER 登记处)的数据评估 SES 与 TID 管理和并发症风险之间的关联。
本研究是一项横断面分析,描述了 SES 因素(教育、收入、就业和保险覆盖范围)与 T1D 结局(糖化血红蛋白[A1C]、急性和慢性并发症和合并症)之间的关联,使用卡方检验和回归分析(调整糖尿病持续时间、性别、种族和糖尿病技术使用情况)。
在 1333 名 PWT1D 样本中,较低的教育水平与心血管疾病(比值比[OR],2.44;p=0.002)、抑郁症(OR,1.56;p=0.020)、肾病(OR,2.10;p=0.001)和更高的 A1C(OR,1.79;p<0.001)相关。低收入组更有可能报告更高的 A1C(OR,2.16;p=0.001)、视网膜病变(OR,1.84;p=0.038)、神经病变(OR,1.89;p=0.043)、肾病(OR,2.23;p=0.024)、严重低血糖(OR,1.87;p=0.022)和抑郁症(OR,1.87;p=0.012)。失业与视网膜病变(OR,2.37;p=0.009)和神经病变(OR,1.96;p=0.035)相关。接受公共保险的参与者更有可能报告糖尿病酮症酸中毒(OR,2.81;p=0.001)和神经病变(OR,1.67;p=0.020)。
SES 较低的 PWT1D,特别是那些收入和教育水平较低的患者,更有可能报告与 T1D 相关的并发症和合并症。需要进一步进行纵向研究,以更好地了解这些关联的性质和方向。