From the Duke University School of Medicine (J.B.L., B.G.H.); Duke University Fuqua School of Business (J.B.L.); Duke University Department of Population Health Sciences (M.N.H., A.G.C., B.G.H.); Duke University Health System (J.B.); Duke University Department of Medicine (J.B.); and Duke University Department of Neurology (M.W.L.), Durham, NC.
Neurology. 2023 Apr 25;100(17):e1776-e1786. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000207094. Epub 2023 Feb 15.
Patients of low individual socioeconomic status (SES) are at a greater risk of unfavorable health outcomes. However, the association between neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation and health outcomes for patients with neurologic disorders has not been studied at the population level. Our objective was to determine the association between neighborhood socioeconomic deprivation and 30-day mortality and readmission after hospitalization for various neurologic conditions.
This was a retrospective study of nationwide Medicare claims from 2017 to 2019. We included patients older than 65 years hospitalized for the following broad categories based on diagnosis-related groups (DRGs): multiple sclerosis and cerebellar ataxia (DRG 058-060); stroke (061-072); degenerative nervous system disorders (056-057); epilepsy (100-101); traumatic coma (082-087), and nontraumatic coma (080-081). The exposure of interest was neighborhood SES, measured by the area deprivation index (ADI), which uses socioeconomic indicators, such as educational attainment, unemployment, infrastructure access, and income, to estimate area-level socioeconomic deprivation at the level of census block groups. Patients were grouped into high, middle, and low neighborhood-level SES based on ADI percentiles. Adjustment covariates included age, comorbidity burden, race/ethnicity, individual SES, and sex.
After exclusions, 905,784 patients were included in the mortality analysis and 915,993 were included in the readmission analysis. After adjustment for age, sex, race/ethnicity, comorbidity burden, and individual SES, patients from low SES neighborhoods had higher 30-day mortality rates compared with patients from high SES neighborhoods for all disease categories except for multiple sclerosis: magnitudes of the effect ranged from an adjusted odds ratio of 2.46 (95% CI 1.60-3.78) for the nontraumatic coma group to 1.23 (95% CI 1.19-1.28) for the stroke group. After adjustment, no significant differences in readmission rates were observed for any of the groups.
Neighborhood SES is strongly associated with 30-day mortality for many common neurologic conditions even after accounting for baseline comorbidity burden and individual SES. Strategies to improve health equity should explicitly consider the effect of neighborhood environments on health outcomes.
个体社会经济地位(SES)较低的患者更有可能出现不良健康结局。然而,在人群层面上,社区社会经济剥夺与神经障碍患者的健康结局之间的关联尚未得到研究。我们的目的是确定社区社会经济剥夺与各种神经疾病患者住院后 30 天死亡率和再入院率之间的关系。
这是一项基于 2017 年至 2019 年全国医疗保险索赔的回顾性研究。我们纳入了年龄在 65 岁以上的、根据诊断相关组(DRG)住院的患者,包括以下广泛分类:多发性硬化症和小脑共济失调(DRG 058-060);中风(061-072);退行性神经系统疾病(056-057);癫痫(100-101);创伤性昏迷(082-087)和非创伤性昏迷(080-081)。感兴趣的暴露因素是社区 SES,通过区域剥夺指数(ADI)来衡量,ADI 利用教育程度、失业率、基础设施获取和收入等社会经济指标,估算人口普查街区组层面的区域社会经济剥夺程度。根据 ADI 百分位数,患者被分为高、中、低社区 SES 组。调整协变量包括年龄、合并症负担、种族/民族、个体 SES 和性别。
排除后,905784 例患者纳入死亡率分析,915993 例患者纳入再入院分析。在调整年龄、性别、种族/民族、合并症负担和个体 SES 后,除多发性硬化症外,来自低 SES 社区的患者与来自高 SES 社区的患者相比,所有疾病类别的 30 天死亡率均较高:效应幅度从非创伤性昏迷组的调整比值比 2.46(95%CI 1.60-3.78)到中风组的 1.23(95%CI 1.19-1.28)。调整后,各组的再入院率均无显著差异。
即使考虑到基线合并症负担和个体 SES,社区 SES 与许多常见神经疾病的 30 天死亡率密切相关。改善公平性的策略应明确考虑社区环境对健康结果的影响。