Perceived neighborhood disadvantage and poor chronic health in Israel.

IF 3.5 4区 医学 Q1 HEALTH POLICY & SERVICES
Sharon Stein Merkin, Kathleen Abu-Saad
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Abstract

Background: Social disparities in health persist in Israel despite universal health care. Few studies have focused on the impact of neighborhood disadvantage on health in a representative sample of the Israeli population while accounting for multiple socioeconomic factors. The objective of this study was to assess the independent association between perceived neighborhood disadvantage and self-reported poor chronic health.

Methods: Self-reported poor chronic health was defined as (1) reported not very good/poor health, and (2) having a chronic health/physical problem for > = 6 months disrupting daily life activities. Neighborhood disadvantage was based on self-reported measures of residential environment (scale of dissatisfaction with transportation, parks, cleanliness, waste removal, noise, pollution, safety, and walkability) and social problems (dissatisfaction related to neighbors, and neighbors interacting to improve the environment). High levels of neighborhood problems were defined as top 25th percentile of dissatisfaction scales. Logistic regression models included incremental adjustment for sex, age, ethnicity/religion, immigration status, peripheral region and then income, education and employment status.

Results: A total of n = 7,020 participants with non-missing data were included. High levels of neighborhood environmental and social problems were independently associated with poor chronic health even after adjustment for sex, age, ethnicity/religion, immigration status, and peripheral region, and remained statistically significant after additionally adjusting for income, education, employment and lifestyle factors (odds ratio (OR) 1.5, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.2-1.9 for environmental problems; OR 1.3, 95% CI 1.1-1.6 for social problems).

Conclusions: Living in areas of perceived disadvantage conferred health risks beyond those related to ethnicity or socioeconomic status. These findings suggest that neighborhood-level factors contribute significantly to health disparities in Israel and should be included in national efforts to evaluate and minimize these health disparities. Future research is needed to also consider objective measures of neighborhood disadvantage, in order to determine the more salient neighborhood measures with respect to health outcomes and to effectively develop targeted interventions to reduce area-level health disparities.

以色列社区弱势和慢性健康状况不佳。
背景:尽管全民保健,但以色列在保健方面的社会差距仍然存在。在考虑多种社会经济因素的同时,很少有研究关注以色列人口代表性样本中邻里劣势对健康的影响。本研究的目的是评估感知邻里劣势与自我报告的慢性健康状况不佳之间的独立关联。方法:自我报告的慢性健康状况不佳定义为(1)报告的健康状况不是很好/差,(2)有慢性健康/身体问题,扰乱日常生活活动达6个月。邻里劣势是基于自我报告的居住环境(对交通、公园、清洁度、垃圾清除、噪音、污染、安全和可步行性的不满程度)和社会问题(与邻居有关的不满,以及邻居为改善环境而进行的互动)。高水平的邻里问题被定义为不满量表的前25百分位。Logistic回归模型包括性别、年龄、种族/宗教、移民身份、周边地区以及收入、教育和就业状况的增量调整。结果:共纳入n = 7020名无缺失数据的参与者。即使在性别、年龄、种族/宗教、移民身份和周边地区调整后,高水平的社区环境和社会问题仍与慢性健康状况不佳独立相关,并且在额外调整收入、教育、就业和生活方式因素后仍具有统计学意义(环境问题的优势比(OR)为1.5,95%置信区间(CI)为1.2-1.9;社会问题的OR为1.3,95% CI为1.1-1.6)。结论:生活在被认为处于不利地位的地区所带来的健康风险超出了与种族或社会经济地位相关的风险。这些调查结果表明,社区一级的因素在很大程度上造成了以色列的健康差距,应将其纳入国家评估和尽量减少这些健康差距的努力中。未来的研究还需要考虑社区劣势的客观衡量标准,以便确定与健康结果有关的更突出的社区措施,并有效地制定有针对性的干预措施,以减少地区一级的健康差距。
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
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
4.40%
发文量
38
审稿时长
28 weeks
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