Chen Shanquan, Banks Lena Morgon, Kipchumba Elijah, Davey Calum, Sulaiman Munshi, Kuper Hannah
International Centre for Evidence in Disability, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, London, WC1E 7HT, United Kingdom.
Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
EClinicalMedicine. 2025 Jul 3;85:103318. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2025.103318. eCollection 2025 Jul.
People with disabilities experience significant health inequalities and barriers to healthcare access globally. While poverty alleviation interventions show promise for improving health outcomes, evidence specifically for people with disabilities remains limited. This study evaluated the effectiveness of a disability-inclusive graduation (DIG) programme on health outcomes among ultra-poor people with disabilities in Uganda.
We conducted a two-arm, parallel cluster-randomized controlled trial in four districts of Northern Uganda. Clusters were randomly assigned to either the DIG intervention (96 clusters) or control group (89 clusters). This analysis focused on households with people with disabilities, as identified by the Washington Group Short Set questions and verified by BRAC programme managers. Households in treatment clusters received up to 18 months DIG intervention between December 2020 and June 2022, combining asset transfers, cash support, skills training, financial inclusion activities, and disability-specific services including rehabilitation and assistive devices. The primary outcome was experience of illness/injury in the past 3 months, assessed at both first follow-up (immediately post-intervention) and second follow-up (about 16 months post-intervention), with secondary outcomes including unmet health needs, mental health status, unmet assistive product needs, and healthcare expenditure. Effects were estimated using linear mixed-effects regression or generalized estimating equations, reporting minimally-adjusted and fully-adjusted mean differences (FAMD) or odds ratios (FAOR) with 95% CIs. The trial was registered with RIDIE (RIDIE-STUDY-ID-626008898983a) and ISRCTN (ISRCTN-78592382).
At baseline, 691 participants (370 intervention, 321 control) were included. The DIG intervention did not significantly impact overall illness/injury prevalence at either first follow-up (41.18% vs 45.86%, FAOR 0.84, 95% CI 0.58-1.22) or second follow-up (55.65% vs 53.98%, FAOR 1.07, 95% CI 0.74-1.56). However, the intervention demonstrated a progressively strengthening effect on reducing unmet health needs, from marginal improvement immediately post-intervention (FAOR 0.56, 95% CI 0.31-1.02, p = 0.06) to significant reduction at 16 months post-intervention (FAOR 0.4, 95% CI 0.22-0.71, p = 0.002). Notably, the intervention produced temporal potential shifts in disease patterns, with malaria showing contrasting trends between follow-up periods. Sex-differentiated effects emerged by second follow-up, with females in the intervention group experiencing fewer injuries (FAOR for interaction 0.17, 95% CI 0.04-0.74, p = 0.02) but more pain-related conditions compared to males (FAOR for interaction 2.43, 95% CI 1.05-5.59, p = 0.04), though these subgroup findings require replication in future studies. No significant differences were observed in mental health outcomes or health expenditure.
This first randomized evaluation of a disability-inclusive graduation programme demonstrates that while economic empowerment alone may not reduce overall illness prevalence among people with disabilities, it can progressively improve healthcare access over time. The temporal evolution of effects and emerging sex-differentiated impacts highlight the need for sustained support and gender-sensitive approaches in future disability-inclusive poverty reduction programmes, with additional health-specific components to achieve broader improvements in health outcomes.
PENDA, funded by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
全球范围内,残疾人在健康方面面临着显著的不平等以及获得医疗服务的障碍。虽然扶贫干预措施有望改善健康状况,但针对残疾人的具体证据仍然有限。本研究评估了一项包容性残疾脱贫(DIG)计划对乌干达极端贫困残疾人健康状况的有效性。
我们在乌干达北部的四个地区进行了一项双臂平行整群随机对照试验。整群被随机分配到DIG干预组(96个整群)或对照组(89个整群)。本分析聚焦于经华盛顿小组简短问题识别并由BRAC项目经理核实的有残疾人的家庭。干预整群中的家庭在2020年12月至2022年6月期间接受了长达18个月的DIG干预,包括资产转移、现金支持、技能培训、金融包容性活动以及包括康复和辅助器具在内的针对残疾的服务。主要结局是过去3个月内的疾病/受伤经历,在首次随访(干预后立即进行)和第二次随访(干预后约16个月)时进行评估,次要结局包括未满足的健康需求、心理健康状况、未满足的辅助产品需求以及医疗支出。使用线性混合效应回归或广义估计方程估计效应,报告最小调整和完全调整的平均差异(FAMD)或优势比(FAOR)及95%置信区间。该试验已在RIDIE(RIDIE - STUDY - ID - 626008898983a)和ISRCTN(ISRCTN - 78592382)注册。
在基线时,纳入了691名参与者(370名干预组,321名对照组)。DIG干预在首次随访(41.18%对45.86%,FAOR 0.84,95%置信区间0.58 - 1.22)或第二次随访(55.65%对53.98%,FAOR 1.07,95%置信区间0.74 - 1.56)时对总体疾病/受伤患病率均无显著影响。然而,该干预对减少未满足的健康需求显示出逐渐增强的效果,从干预后立即有轻微改善(FAOR 0.56,95%置信区间0.31 - 1.02,p = 0.06)到干预后16个月有显著降低(FAOR 0.4,95%置信区间0.22 - 0.71,p = 0.002)。值得注意的是,该干预在疾病模式上产生了时间上的潜在变化,疟疾在随访期间呈现出相反的趋势。到第二次随访时出现了性别差异效应,干预组中的女性受伤较少(交互作用的FAOR 0.17,95%置信区间0.04 - 0.74,p = 0.02),但与男性相比,与疼痛相关的疾病更多(交互作用的FAOR 2.43,95%置信区间1.05 - 5.59,p = 0.04),不过这些亚组结果需要在未来研究中进行重复验证。在心理健康结局或医疗支出方面未观察到显著差异。
这项对包容性残疾脱贫计划的首次随机评估表明,仅经济赋权可能不会降低残疾人的总体疾病患病率,但随着时间推移它可以逐步改善医疗服务的可及性。效应的时间演变和新出现的性别差异影响凸显了在未来包容性残疾减贫计划中需要持续支持和对性别敏感的方法,以及额外的针对健康的组成部分,以实现更广泛的健康状况改善。
由英国外交、联邦及发展办公室资助的PENDA。