Hahn R A, Eaker E, Barker N D, Teutsch S M, Sosniak W, Krieger N
Epidemiology Program Office, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, GA 30333, USA.
Epidemiology. 1995 Sep;6(5):490-7.
We conducted a survival analysis to determine the effect of poverty on mortality in a national sample of blacks and whites 25-74 years of age (in the First National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey and National Health Examination Follow-up Survey). We estimated the proportion of mortality associated with poverty from 1973 through 1984 and in 1991 by calculating the population attributable risk. We assessed confounding by major known risk factors, such as smoking, serum total cholesterol, and inactivity. In 1973, 16.1% of U.S. mortality among black and white persons 25-74 years of age was attributable to poverty; in 1991, the proportion increased to 17.7%. In 1991, the population attributable risk of poverty on mortality was lowest for white women, 1.7 times higher for white men, 2.6 times higher for black women, and 3.6 times higher for black men. Potential confounders explained 40% of the effect of poverty on mortality among women. The proportion of mortality attributable to poverty among U.S. black and white adults has increased in recent decades and is comparable to that attributable to cigarette smoking. The effect of poverty on mortality must be explained by conditions other than commonly recognized risk factors.
我们进行了一项生存分析,以确定贫困对25至74岁黑人和白人全国样本死亡率的影响(在第一次全国健康和营养检查调查及全国健康检查随访调查中)。我们通过计算人群归因风险,估计了1973年至1984年以及1991年与贫困相关的死亡率比例。我们评估了主要已知风险因素(如吸烟、血清总胆固醇和缺乏运动)的混杂情况。1973年,25至74岁黑人和白人中16.1%的美国死亡率可归因于贫困;到1991年,这一比例增至17.7%。1991年,贫困对死亡率的人群归因风险在白人女性中最低,白人男性高1.7倍,黑人女性高2.6倍,黑人男性高3.6倍。潜在混杂因素解释了贫困对女性死亡率影响的40%。近几十年来,美国黑人和白人成年人中可归因于贫困的死亡率比例有所上升,与可归因于吸烟的比例相当。贫困对死亡率的影响必须由常见公认风险因素以外的其他状况来解释。