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按种族和移民身份划分的晚期慢性肾脏病患者的心理社会困扰:一项加拿大横断面研究

Psychosocial Distress in Patients With Advanced CKD by Racial Group and Immigrant Status: A Canadian Cross-sectional Study.

作者信息

Singh Navneet, Thiagalingam Punithan, Hussain Junayd, Shah Vishva, Edwards Nathaniel, Lui Eric, Nesrallah Gihad, Lok Charmaine E, Walele Abdul Aziz, Novak Marta, James Carl E, Mucsi Istvan

机构信息

Ajmera Transplant Center, University Health Network and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Division of Nephrology, University Health Network and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

Department of Nephrology, Humber River Hospital, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

出版信息

Am J Kidney Dis. 2023 Jan;81(1):67-78.e1. doi: 10.1053/j.ajkd.2022.06.009. Epub 2022 Aug 7.

Abstract

RATIONALE & OBJECTIVE: Patients with advanced chronic kidney disease (CKD) have been reported to experience profound psychosocial distress. Other work has established that patients with CKD from marginalized populations (including individuals who on the basis of race often face racism and related discrimination, termed "racialization") experience health care inequities. Given limited information on the intersection of these 2 phenomena, we assessed the association of psychosocial distress with racialized status and immigrant status in Canadians with advanced CKD.

STUDY DESIGN

Secondary analysis of cross-sectional data.

SETTING & PARTICIPANTS: 536 patients with advanced CKD (estimated glomerular filtration rate<30mL/min/1.73m, with or without kidney replacement therapy) from multiple clinical centers in Toronto.

EXPOSURE

Racialized status (individuals who identify as Asian or as African, Caribbean, or Black Canadian), immigrant status, and combined immigrant-racialized status.

OUTCOME

Psychosocial distress, defined as the presence of depression, anxiety, or social difficulties (ie, a score of≥10 points on the Patient Health Questionnaire 9, Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7, or Social Distress 16 scales, respectively).

ANALYTICAL APPROACH

The independent associations of racialized status and immigrant status with psychosocial distress, depression, anxiety, and social difficulties were examined using univariable- and multivariable-adjusted logistic regression.

RESULTS

Mean age of the 536 participants was 57±16 (SD) years, 62% were male, and 45% were immigrants. Of the sample, 58% were White, 22% were African, Caribbean, or Black Canadian, and 20% were Asian. Psychosocial distress was present in 36% of participants (depression in 19%, anxiety in 12%, and social difficulties in 31%). To assess the combined impact of racialized and immigrant status, we created a variable with mutually exclusive categories: White nonimmigrant, racialized nonimmigrant, White immigrant, and racialized immigrant participants. In our final multivariable-adjusted model, compared with White nonimmigrant participants, racialized immigrant participants were more likely to have psychosocial distress (OR, 2.96 [95% CI, 1.81-4.81]), depression (OR, 1.87 [95% CI, 1.05-3.34]), and social difficulties (OR, 3.36 [95% CI, 2.03-5.57]). Overall similar associations were seen for racialized nonimmigrants and for White immigrants.

LIMITATIONS

Convenience sample; small subgroups; combined exposure variable grouping Asian and African, Caribbean, and Black participants together; lack of data about mechanisms.

CONCLUSIONS

Both racialized and immigrant status based on self-report of demographic characteristics were associated with psychosocial distress among patients with advanced CKD. These patients may benefit from culturally competent psychosocial support.

PLAIN-LANGUAGE SUMMARY: Psychosocial distress is frequent in patients with advanced chronic kidney disease and impacts quality of life and clinical outcomes. Psychosocial distress may be especially scarring in people who are racialized (marginalized on account of their membership in a particular racial group) and/or who are immigrants. We assessed the association of psychosocial distress with racialized and immigrant status in Canadians with advanced chronic kidney disease. Among 536 participants from multiple medical centers in Toronto, we found that racialized and immigrant participants were more likely to have psychosocial distress, depression, and social difficulties compared with White nonimmigrant participants. This is likely related to the multiple intersectional challenges, including experience with racism and discrimination that racialized immigrant patients may face. Further studies are needed to elucidate the specific factors that contribute to more distress. The potential impact of culturally competent and safe support for these patients will also need to be studied.

摘要

理论依据与目的

据报道,晚期慢性肾脏病(CKD)患者会经历严重的心理社会困扰。其他研究表明,来自边缘化群体的CKD患者(包括那些基于种族经常面临种族主义和相关歧视的个体,即“种族化”)存在医疗保健不公平现象。鉴于关于这两种现象交集的信息有限,我们评估了晚期CKD加拿大患者心理社会困扰与种族化状态和移民身份之间的关联。

研究设计

横断面数据的二次分析。

研究地点与参与者

来自多伦多多个临床中心的536例晚期CKD患者(估计肾小球滤过率<30mL/min/1.73m²,接受或未接受肾脏替代治疗)。

暴露因素

种族化状态(自我认定为亚洲人或非洲、加勒比或加拿大黑人的个体)、移民身份以及移民 - 种族化综合状态。

结局指标

心理社会困扰,定义为存在抑郁、焦虑或社交困难(即分别在患者健康问卷9、广泛性焦虑障碍7或社交困扰16量表上得分≥10分)。

分析方法

使用单变量和多变量调整的逻辑回归分析种族化状态和移民身份与心理社会困扰、抑郁、焦虑和社交困难之间的独立关联。

结果

536名参与者的平均年龄为57±16(标准差)岁,62%为男性,45%为移民。样本中,58%为白人,22%为非洲、加勒比或加拿大黑人,20%为亚洲人。36%的参与者存在心理社会困扰(19%有抑郁,12%有焦虑,31%有社交困难)。为评估种族化和移民身份的综合影响,我们创建了一个具有相互排斥类别的变量:白人非移民、种族化非移民、白人移民和种族化移民参与者。在我们最终的多变量调整模型中,与白人非移民参与者相比,种族化移民参与者更有可能出现心理社会困扰(比值比[OR],2.96[95%置信区间(CI),1.81 - 4.81])、抑郁(OR,1.87[95%CI,1.05 - 3.34])和社交困难(OR,3.36[95%CI,2.03 - 5.57])。种族化非移民和白人移民总体上有类似的关联。

局限性

便利样本;亚组较小;将亚洲、非洲、加勒比和黑人参与者合并为一个暴露变量组;缺乏关于机制的数据。

结论

基于人口统计学特征自我报告的种族化和移民身份均与晚期CKD患者的心理社会困扰相关。这些患者可能受益于具有文化能力的心理社会支持。

通俗易懂的总结

心理社会困扰在晚期慢性肾脏病患者中很常见,会影响生活质量和临床结局。心理社会困扰对于那些被种族化(因其属于特定种族群体而处于边缘化)和/或移民的人可能尤其具有创伤性。我们评估了晚期慢性肾脏病加拿大患者心理社会困扰与种族化和移民身份之间的关联。在来自多伦多多个医疗中心的536名参与者中,我们发现与白人非移民参与者相比,种族化和移民参与者更有可能出现心理社会困扰、抑郁和社交困难。这可能与多种交叉性挑战有关,包括种族化移民患者可能面临的种族主义和歧视经历。需要进一步研究以阐明导致更多困扰的具体因素。还需要研究具有文化能力和安全的支持对这些患者的潜在影响。

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