Department of Family and Social Medicine (A Telzak, EC Chambers, and S Levano), Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.
Department of Family and Social Medicine and Department of Pediatrics (KP Fiori), Montefiore Medical Center, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY.
Acad Pediatr. 2023 Sep-Oct;23(7):1361-1367. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2023.02.009. Epub 2023 Feb 27.
Community-level social determinants of health impact asthma outcomes among children; however, individual patient's priorities are not often included in designing social care interventions. Identifying connections between patient-prioritized unmet social needs and asthma severity status may allow for improved patient-centered approaches to asthma management. In this analysis, we examined the association between unmet social needs and asthma severity in an urban population of children. We hypothesized that those with a greater number of unmet social needs would report a more severe asthma status.
We conducted a secondary analysis of 4887 patients screened for unmet social needs and asthma severity status. Bivariate associations and adjusted logistic regression modeling were used to assess the association between unmet social needs and asthma severity.
Persistent asthma severity status was associated with several unmet social needs, including housing quality and stability, lack of money for food, transportation, and healthcare costs. In the multivariable analysis, having 3 or more unmet social needs was associated with a 59% greater odds of persistent asthma status (CI, 1.18-2.14; P = .002), and having 2 unmet social needs was associated with a 33% greater odds of persistent asthma status (CI, 1.00-1.78; P = .05).
Unmet social needs were associated with asthma severity status, with a greater number of unmet social needs associated with greater odds of severe asthma status. Additional studies are warranted to further evaluate the temporal relationship between unmet social needs and how they may compound one another in their relationship with asthma severity.
社区层面的健康社会决定因素会影响儿童的哮喘结果;然而,在设计社会关怀干预措施时,通常不会将患者的优先事项纳入考虑。确定患者优先考虑的未满足的社会需求与哮喘严重程度之间的联系,可能有助于改善以患者为中心的哮喘管理方法。在本分析中,我们研究了城市儿童人群中未满足的社会需求与哮喘严重程度之间的关联。我们假设,那些未满足的社会需求较多的患者,其哮喘状况会更严重。
我们对 4887 名筛查出未满足的社会需求和哮喘严重程度的患者进行了二次分析。采用双变量关联和调整后的逻辑回归模型来评估未满足的社会需求与哮喘严重程度之间的关联。
持续性哮喘严重程度与多种未满足的社会需求有关,包括住房质量和稳定性、缺乏食物、交通和医疗保健费用的资金。在多变量分析中,有 3 种或更多未满足的社会需求与持续性哮喘状态的几率增加 59%(CI,1.18-2.14;P =.002)有关,有 2 种未满足的社会需求与持续性哮喘状态的几率增加 33%(CI,1.00-1.78;P =.05)有关。
未满足的社会需求与哮喘严重程度有关,未满足的社会需求越多,哮喘严重程度的几率就越大。需要进一步的研究来进一步评估未满足的社会需求与哮喘严重程度之间的时间关系,以及它们在与哮喘严重程度的关系中如何相互叠加。