Limacher Regula, Hajjioui Abderrazak, Fourtassi Maryam, Fekete Christine
Swiss Paraplegic Research, Guido A. Zäch Institute, Nottwil, Switzerland.
Department of Health Sciences and Medicine, University of Lucerne, Lucerne, Switzerland.
Front Rehabil Sci. 2023 Apr 4;4:1108214. doi: 10.3389/fresc.2023.1108214. eCollection 2023.
Socioeconomic status (SES) and gender are well-known social determinants of health. However, their impact on health in populations with physical disabilities in low-resource countries is still lacking. Therefore, the objective of this study was to investigate associations of individual SES with health and the moderating effect of gender on this association in a Moroccan population with a physical disability, namely spinal cord injury.
Cross-sectional survey data from 385 participants with spinal cord injury living in Morocco were analyzed. SES was operationalized by education level, household income, financial hardship, and subjective social status. Health indicators included secondary conditions, pain, vitality, quality of life, and general health. Associations between SES and health indicators were investigated using linear and logistic regressions. To test the potential moderation of gender, interaction terms between SES and gender were introduced in regression models.
Financial hardship and lower subjective social status were associated with poorer health outcomes in four out of five indicators in the total sample. In contrast, education and income were inconsistently associated with health. Overall, gender did not moderate the association between SES and health, except that educational inequalities in general health were more pronounced in women, and the observation of a trend for a stronger negative effect of subjective social status on men's than woman's health ( > 0.05).
This study revealed that subjective indicators of SES negatively impact on health, whereas evidence for the moderating role of gender in this association was weak. These findings underline the importance to reduce social marginalization and poverty in populations with disabilities in low-resource countries to reduce their double burden of living with a disability and encountering social disadvantages through low SES.
社会经济地位(SES)和性别是众所周知的健康社会决定因素。然而,它们对资源匮乏国家身体残疾人群健康的影响仍不明确。因此,本研究的目的是调查摩洛哥脊髓损伤身体残疾人群中个体社会经济地位与健康之间的关联,以及性别对这种关联的调节作用。
对摩洛哥385名脊髓损伤参与者的横断面调查数据进行分析。社会经济地位通过教育水平、家庭收入、经济困难和主观社会地位来衡量。健康指标包括继发疾病、疼痛、活力、生活质量和总体健康状况。使用线性和逻辑回归研究社会经济地位与健康指标之间的关联。为了检验性别的潜在调节作用,在回归模型中引入了社会经济地位与性别的交互项。
在总样本的五项指标中,有四项显示经济困难和较低的主观社会地位与较差的健康结果相关。相比之下,教育和收入与健康的关联并不一致。总体而言,性别并未调节社会经济地位与健康之间的关联,不过女性在总体健康方面的教育不平等更为明显,并且观察到主观社会地位对男性健康的负面影响比女性更强的趋势(P>0.05)。
本研究表明,社会经济地位的主观指标对健康有负面影响,而性别在这种关联中的调节作用证据不足。这些发现强调了在资源匮乏国家减少残疾人群体的社会边缘化和贫困的重要性,以减轻他们因残疾和社会经济地位低而面临的双重负担。