van Zwieten Anita, Kim Siah, Dominello Amanda, Guha Chandana, Craig Jonathan C, Wong Germaine
School of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine and Health, The University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Centre for Kidney Research, The Children's Hospital at Westmead, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Kidney Int Rep. 2024 Feb 1;9(5):1167-1182. doi: 10.1016/j.ekir.2024.01.042. eCollection 2024 May.
Children and adolescents in families of lower socioeconomic position (SEP) experience an inequitable burden of reduced access to healthcare and poorer health. For children living with chronic kidney disease (CKD), disadvantaged SEP may exacerbate their considerable disease burden. Across the life-course, CKD may also compromise the SEP of families and young people, leading to accumulating health and socioeconomic disadvantage. This narrative review summarizes the current evidence on relationships of SEP with kidney care and health among children and adolescents with CKD from a life-course approach, including impacts of family SEP on kidney care and health, and bidirectional impacts of CKD on SEP. It highlights relevant conceptual models from social epidemiology, current evidence, clinical and policy implications, and provides directions for future research. Reflecting the balance of available evidence, we focus primarily on high-income countries (HICs), with an overview of key issues in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). Overall, a growing body of evidence indicates sobering socioeconomic inequities in health and kidney care among children and adolescents with CKD, and adverse socioeconomic impacts of CKD. Dedicated efforts to tackle inequities are critical to ensuring that all young people with CKD have the opportunity to live long and flourishing lives. To prevent accumulating disadvantage, the global nephrology community must advocate for local government action on upstream social determinants of health; and adopt a life-course approach to kidney care that proactively identifies and addresses unmet social needs, targets intervening factors between SEP and health, and minimizes adverse socioeconomic outcomes across financial, educational and vocational domains.
社会经济地位较低(SEP)家庭中的儿童和青少年面临着获得医疗保健机会减少和健康状况较差的不公平负担。对于患有慢性肾脏病(CKD)的儿童来说,不利的社会经济地位可能会加剧他们相当大的疾病负担。在整个生命过程中,慢性肾脏病也可能损害家庭和年轻人的社会经济地位,导致健康和社会经济方面的不利因素不断累积。这篇叙述性综述从生命历程的角度总结了当前关于社会经济地位与慢性肾脏病儿童和青少年肾脏护理及健康之间关系的证据,包括家庭社会经济地位对肾脏护理和健康的影响,以及慢性肾脏病对社会经济地位的双向影响。它强调了社会流行病学的相关概念模型、当前证据、临床和政策影响,并为未来研究提供了方向。鉴于现有证据的平衡情况,我们主要关注高收入国家(HICs),并概述低收入和中等收入国家(LMICs)的关键问题。总体而言,越来越多的证据表明,患有慢性肾脏病的儿童和青少年在健康和肾脏护理方面存在令人警醒的社会经济不平等,以及慢性肾脏病对社会经济的不利影响。致力于解决不平等问题对于确保所有患有慢性肾脏病的年轻人有机会过上长寿和繁荣的生活至关重要。为防止不利因素不断累积,全球肾脏病学界必须倡导地方政府针对健康的上游社会决定因素采取行动;并采用生命历程方法进行肾脏护理,积极识别和解决未满足的社会需求,针对社会经济地位与健康之间的干预因素,尽量减少金融、教育和职业领域的不良社会经济后果。