Ambade Mayanka, Kim Rockli, Subramanian S V
Indian Institute of Technology Mandi, Himachal Pradesh, India.
Division of Health Policy and Management, College of Health Science, Korea University, Seoul, South Korea; Interdisciplinary Program in Precision Public Health, Department of Public Health Sciences, Graduate School of Korea University, Seoul, South Korea.
Prev Med. 2023 Oct;175:107696. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2023.107696. Epub 2023 Sep 4.
The association of socioeconomic status (SES) with modifiable risk factors for cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) is unclear in developing nations. We studied SES variations in major risk factors and their percentage distribution for adults aged 45 years or above in India. Using individual records of 59,672 individuals aged 45 years or above from the Longitudinal Ageing Study in India Wave 1 (cross-sectional study design), 2017-18, we chart age-and-sex-adjusted prevalence of clinical risk factors such as measured high blood pressure, hypertension, overweight, obesity, central adiposity and self-reported high blood glucose; and lifestyle risk factors such as excessive use of alcohol, current use of smoking and smokeless tobacco and physical inactivity across SES variables of education, quintiles of mean per capita expenditure and social caste. Multivariable analysis was used to explore the SES gradient of risk factors. The sample used in the study is predominantly rural (69.9%), illiterate (50.7%), has more females (54.2%), and belongs to other backward classes (45.6%). Prevalence of high blood pressure, overweight, obesity, central adiposity, high blood glucose, and physical inactivity increased; and excessive alcohol consumption and current use of smoking/smokeless tobacco decreased with income, education, and social caste. However, no significant income gradient was noted for lifestyle risk factors except the use of smokeless tobacco. The income gradient was largest for central adiposity (waist-circumference) with a difference of 23.4 percentage points as it increased from 38.7% among the poorest to 62.1% among the richest. The major burden of CVDs risk factors among older adults aged 45+ years falls among high SES.
在发展中国家,社会经济地位(SES)与心血管疾病(CVDs)可改变风险因素之间的关联尚不清楚。我们研究了印度45岁及以上成年人主要风险因素的SES差异及其百分比分布。利用2017 - 18年印度纵向老龄化研究第一轮(横断面研究设计)中59672名45岁及以上个体的个人记录,我们绘制了年龄和性别调整后的临床风险因素患病率,如测量的高血压、高血压、超重、肥胖、中心性肥胖和自我报告的高血糖;以及生活方式风险因素,如过度饮酒、当前吸烟和使用无烟烟草以及教育、人均支出五分位数和社会种姓等SES变量中的身体活动不足情况。多变量分析用于探索风险因素的SES梯度。该研究中使用的样本主要是农村人口(69.9%)、文盲(50.7%)、女性较多(54.2%),且属于其他落后阶层(45.6%)。高血压、超重、肥胖、中心性肥胖、高血糖和身体活动不足的患病率随着收入、教育程度和社会种姓的提高而增加;而过度饮酒以及当前吸烟/使用无烟烟草的情况则减少。然而,除了使用无烟烟草外,生活方式风险因素未发现显著的收入梯度。中心性肥胖(腰围)的收入梯度最大,从最贫困人群中的38.7%增加到最富裕人群中的62.1%,相差23.4个百分点。45岁及以上老年人中CVDs风险因素的主要负担落在高SES人群中。