World Health Organization Collaborating Centre on Investment for Health and Well-Being, Public Health Wales, Cardiff, United Kingdom.
School of Health Sciences, University of Manchester, Manchester, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2022 Dec 15;10:1056885. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2022.1056885. eCollection 2022.
Throughout Wales and the world, health inequality remains a problem that is interconnected with a wider and complex social, economic and environmental dynamic. Subsequently, action to tackle inequality in health needs to take place at a structural level, acknowledging the constraints affecting an individual's (or community's) capability and opportunity to enable change. While the 'social determinants of health' is an established concept, fully understanding the composition of the health gap is dependent on capturing the relative contributions of a myriad of social, economic and environmental factors within a quantitative analysis.
The decomposition analysis sought to explain the differences in the prevalence of these outcomes in groups stratified by their ability to save at least £10 a month, whether they were in material deprivation, and the presence of a limiting long-standing illness, disability of infirmity. Responses to over 4,200 questions within the National Survey for Wales ( = 46,189; 2016-17 to 2019-20) were considered for analysis. Variables were included based on (1) their alignment to a World Health Organization (WHO) health equity framework ("Health Equity Status Report initiative") and (2) their ability to allow for stratification of the survey sample into distinct groups where considerable gaps in health outcomes existed. A pooled Blinder-Oaxaca model was used to analyse inequalities in self-reported health (fair/poor health, low mental well-being and low life satisfaction) and were stratified by the variables relating to financial security, material deprivation and disability status.
The prevalence of fair/poor health was 75% higher in those who were financially insecure and 95% higher in those who are materially deprived. Decomposition of the outcome revealed that just under half of the health gap was "explained" i.e., 45.5% when stratifying by the respondent's ability to save and 46% when stratifying by material deprivation status. Further analysis of the explained component showed that "Social/Human Capital" and "Income Security/Social Protection" determinants accounted the most for disparities observed; it also showed that "Health Services" determinants accounted the least. These findings were consistent across the majority of scenarios modeled.
The analysis not only quantified the significant health gaps that existed in the years leading up to the COVID-19 pandemic but it has also shown what determinants of health were most influential. Understanding the factors most closely associated with disparities in health is key in identifying policy levers to reduce health inequalities and improve the health and well-being across populations.
在威尔士和世界各地,健康不平等仍然是一个问题,它与更广泛和复杂的社会、经济和环境动态相互关联。因此,解决健康不平等问题需要在结构层面上采取行动,承认影响个人(或社区)改变能力和机会的限制。虽然“社会决定因素”是一个既定的概念,但要充分了解健康差距的构成,就需要在定量分析中捕捉到社会、经济和环境因素的无数相对贡献。
分解分析旨在解释按每月至少储蓄 10 英镑的能力、是否处于物质匮乏状态以及是否存在长期限制的疾病、残疾或虚弱等因素分层的群体中这些结果的流行率差异。对威尔士国家调查(=46189;2016-17 年至 2019-20 年)中超过 4200 个问题的回答进行了分析。变量的纳入基于(1)它们与世界卫生组织(WHO)健康公平框架的一致性(“健康公平状况报告倡议”)和(2)它们能够将调查样本分层为健康结果存在明显差距的不同群体的能力。使用 pooled Blinder-Oaxaca 模型分析自我报告的健康状况(健康状况不佳/差、心理健康水平低和生活满意度低)的不平等,并按与财务安全、物质匮乏和残疾状况相关的变量进行分层。
在经济上不安全的人群中,健康状况不佳/差的比例高 75%,在物质匮乏的人群中,这一比例高 95%。结果分解表明,仅近一半的健康差距是“可解释的”,即当按受访者储蓄能力分层时为 45.5%,当按物质匮乏状况分层时为 46%。对解释部分的进一步分析表明,“社会/人力资本”和“收入保障/社会保护”决定因素占观察到的差异最大;它还表明,“卫生服务”决定因素的影响最小。这些发现与建模的大多数情况一致。
该分析不仅量化了 COVID-19 大流行前几年存在的显著健康差距,还表明了哪些健康决定因素最具影响力。了解与健康差异最密切相关的因素是确定减少健康不平等和改善人口健康和福祉的政策杠杆的关键。