Morton W E, Horton H B, Baker H W
Sex Transm Dis. 1979 Jul-Sep;6(3):206-10. doi: 10.1097/00007435-197907000-00004.
A new socioeconomic index scored for census tract characteristics (income, education, and household crowding) was used for study of the socioeconomic patterns of incidences of syphilis, gonorrhea, and squamous cell carcinoma of the uterine cervix in Oregon's three metropolitan statistical areas. Cases of syphilis and gonorrhea were reported, but cases of uterine cancer were found by intensive searches of records from hospitals and pathology laboratories. For all three diseases there was a striking inverse relationship between incidence and urban socioeconomic status, a fact that indicated that this distribution pattern is probably real and not a function of reporting bias. This strong socioeconomic effect on the incidence of sexually transmitted diseases probably reflects corresponding differences in frequencies of nonmarital sexual contacts among the different socioeconomic strata; these differences should be recognized in our efforts to develop more rational control measure for application in the community. From the information available about contacts of persons with syphilis, it appeared that this socioeconomic incidence pattern was a function of heterosexual behavior.
一种根据普查区特征(收入、教育程度和家庭拥挤程度)计分的新社会经济指数,被用于研究俄勒冈州三个大都市统计区梅毒、淋病和子宫颈鳞状细胞癌发病率的社会经济模式。梅毒和淋病病例是报告得来的,但子宫癌病例是通过对医院和病理实验室记录的密集搜索发现的。对于这三种疾病,发病率与城市社会经济地位之间都存在显著的负相关关系,这一事实表明这种分布模式可能是真实的,而非报告偏差所致。这种对性传播疾病发病率的强烈社会经济影响,可能反映了不同社会经济阶层非婚性接触频率的相应差异;在我们努力制定更合理的控制措施以应用于社区时,应该认识到这些差异。从关于梅毒患者接触情况的现有信息来看,这种社会经济发病率模式似乎是异性性行为的一种作用。