社会经济不平等与糖尿病并发症:匈牙利行政数据分析。

IF 3.7 3区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH
Péter Elek, Balázs Mayer, Orsolya Varga
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引用次数: 0

摘要

糖尿病并发症与医疗费用增加和患者预后恶化有关。在本文中,我们分析了个人水平的人口统计和地区水平的社会经济和卫生保健变量如何影响糖尿病并发症的存在和严重程度及其与死亡率的关系。我们的研究利用了2010年至2017年匈牙利所有糖尿病患者的匿名行政医疗数据。我们构建了定居年水平和个人年水平的面板数据集来分析糖尿病的患病率、发病率和并发症,并采用泊松模型和logit模型来探讨并发症与解释变量之间的关系。采用适应性糖尿病并发症严重程度指数(aDCSI),通过汇总ICD-10诊断代码中的个体并发症评分,定量评估并发症的严重程度。我们发现,在失业率高于中位数的定居点,糖尿病的患病率和发病率更高,在那里,患者表现出更严重的并发症,如更高的平均aDCSI得分所示。在社会经济因素中,失业率与aDCSI得分的增加尤其相关,而更好的医疗保健可及性与未调整模型中较低的aDCSI得分相关,而在调整模型中则与较高的aDCSI得分相关。并发症的存在和严重程度,特别是肾脏、心血管和外周血管并发症,大大增加了5年住院患者死亡率。当考虑到并发症时,按定居点水平失业率划分的死亡率差异就消失了。我们的结论是,社会经济不平等,特别是高失业率,与糖尿病并发症和相关的死亡风险密切相关。通过改善医疗保健可及性和有针对性的公共卫生战略来解决这些差异,可以在减轻糖尿病相关并发症负担和改善患者预后方面发挥关键作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Socioeconomic inequalities and diabetes complications: an analysis of administrative data from Hungary.

Diabetes complications are associated with increased healthcare costs and worsened patient outcomes. In this paper, we analyse how individual-level demographic and territorial-level socioeconomic and healthcare variables influence the presence and severity of diabetes complications and their relationship with mortality. Our study utilizes anonymized administrative healthcare data on all diabetes patients of Hungary between 2010 and 2017. We construct settlement-year level and individual-year level panel datasets to analyse diabetes prevalence, incidence and complications, employing Poisson and logit models to explore associations between complications and the explanatory variables. The adapted Diabetes Complications Severity Index (aDCSI) is employed to quantitatively evaluate the severity of complications by aggregating individual complication scores from ICD-10 diagnosis codes. We find that diabetes prevalence and incidence are higher in settlements with above-median unemployment rates, where patients exhibit more severe complications, as shown by higher average aDCSI scores. Among socioeconomic factors, unemployment rate is particularly associated with increased aDCSI scores, while better healthcare access is associated with lower aDCSI scores in unadjusted but with higher scores in adjusted models. The presence and severity of complications, especially renal, cardiovascular and peripheral vascular ones, substantially increase 5-year inpatient mortality. Most of the mortality difference by settlement-level unemployment rate disappears when complications are accounted for. We conclude that socioeconomic inequalities, particularly higher unemployment rates, are strongly linked to diabetes complications and associated mortality risk. Addressing these disparities through improved healthcare accessibility and targeted public health strategies could play a crucial role in reducing the burden of diabetes-related complications and improving patient outcomes.

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来源期刊
European Journal of Public Health
European Journal of Public Health 医学-公共卫生、环境卫生与职业卫生
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
2.30%
发文量
2039
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Public Health (EJPH) is a multidisciplinary journal aimed at attracting contributions from epidemiology, health services research, health economics, social sciences, management sciences, ethics and law, environmental health sciences, and other disciplines of relevance to public health. The journal provides a forum for discussion and debate of current international public health issues, with a focus on the European Region. Bi-monthly issues contain peer-reviewed original articles, editorials, commentaries, book reviews, news, letters to the editor, announcements of events, and various other features.
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