Contribution of ethnicity, area level deprivation and air pollution to paediatric intensive care unit admissions in the United Kingdom 2008-2021.

IF 9.6 1区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
EClinicalMedicine Pub Date : 2024-08-16 eCollection Date: 2024-09-01 DOI:10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102776
Hannah K Mitchell, Sarah E Seaton, Christopher Leahy, Khurram Mustafa, Hannah Buckley, Peter Davis, Richard G Feltbower, Padmanabhan Ramnarayan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: There is emerging evidence on the impact of social and environmental determinants of health on paediatric intensive care unit (PICU) admissions and outcomes. We analysed UK paediatric intensive care data to explore disparities in the incidence of admission according to a child's ethnicity and the degree of deprivation and pollution in the child's residential area.

Methods: Data were extracted on children <16 years admitted to UK PICUs between 1st January 2008 and 31st December 2021 from the Paediatric Intensive Care Audit Network (PICANet) database. Ethnicity was categorised as White, Asian, Black, Mixed or Other. Deprivation was quantified using the 'children in low-income families' measure and outdoor air pollution was characterised using mean annual PM2.5 level at local authority level, both divided into population-weighted quintiles. UK population estimates were used to calculate crude incidence of PICU admission. Incidence rate ratios were calculated using Poisson regression models.

Findings: There were 245,099 admissions, of which 60.7% were unplanned. After adjusting for age and sex, Asian and Black children had higher relative incidence of unplanned PICU admission compared to White (IRR 1.29 [95% CI: 1.25-1.33] and 1.50 [95% CI: 1.44-1.56] respectively), but there was no evidence of increased incidence of planned admission. Children living in the most deprived quintile had 1.50 times the incidence of admission in the least deprived quintile (95% CI: 1.46-1.54). There were higher crude admission levels of children living in the most polluted quintile compared to the least (157.8 vs 113.6 admissions per 100,000 child years), but after adjustment for ethnicity, deprivation, age and sex there was no association between pollution and PICU admission (IRR 1.00 [95% CI: 1.00-1.00] per 1 μg/m3 increase).

Interpretation: Ethnicity and deprivation impact the incidence of PICU admission. When restricting to unplanned respiratory admissions and ventilated patients only, increasing pollution level was associated with increased incidence of PICU admission. It is essential to act to reduce these observed disparities, further work is needed to understand mechanisms behind these findings and how they relate to outcomes.

Funding: There was no direct funding for this project. HM was funded by an NIHR Academic Clinical Fellowship (ACF-2022-18-017).

2008-2021 年英国种族、地区贫困程度和空气污染对儿科重症监护室入院率的影响。
背景:关于健康的社会和环境决定因素对儿科重症监护室(PICU)入院和治疗结果的影响,有新的证据。我们对英国儿科重症监护数据进行了分析,以探讨根据儿童的种族以及儿童居住地区的贫困和污染程度而导致的入院率差异:方法:提取了儿童的数据:入院人数为 245,099 人,其中 60.7% 为计划外入院。在对年龄和性别进行调整后,亚裔和黑人儿童与白人相比,计划外入住 PICU 的相对发生率更高(IRR 分别为 1.29 [95% CI:1.25-1.33] 和 1.50 [95% CI:1.44-1.56]),但没有证据表明计划内入院的发生率有所增加。生活在最贫困五分之一人口中的儿童的入院率是生活在最不贫困五分之一人口中儿童的 1.50 倍(95% CI:1.46-1.54)。与污染最严重的五分之一人口相比,生活在污染最严重的五分之一人口中的儿童的粗入院率更高(每 10 万儿童年入院 157.8 人 vs 113.6 人),但在对种族、贫困程度、年龄和性别进行调整后,污染与 PICU 入院率之间没有关联(每增加 1 μg/m3 IRR 为 1.00 [95% CI:1.00-1.00]):解释:种族和贫困程度对入住 PICU 的发生率有影响。如果仅限于非计划性呼吸道入院和呼吸机病人,污染水平的增加与 PICU 入院率的增加有关。必须采取行动减少这些观察到的差异,还需要进一步开展工作,以了解这些发现背后的机制以及它们与结果之间的关系:本项目没有直接资金。HM得到了NIHR学术临床奖学金(ACF-2022-18-017)的资助。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
EClinicalMedicine
EClinicalMedicine Medicine-Medicine (all)
CiteScore
18.90
自引率
1.30%
发文量
506
审稿时长
22 days
期刊介绍: eClinicalMedicine is a gold open-access clinical journal designed to support frontline health professionals in addressing the complex and rapid health transitions affecting societies globally. The journal aims to assist practitioners in overcoming healthcare challenges across diverse communities, spanning diagnosis, treatment, prevention, and health promotion. Integrating disciplines from various specialties and life stages, it seeks to enhance health systems as fundamental institutions within societies. With a forward-thinking approach, eClinicalMedicine aims to redefine the future of healthcare.
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