A health inequality analysis of childhood asthma prevalence in urban Australia

IF 11.4 1区 医学 Q1 ALLERGY Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology Pub Date : 2024-08-01 DOI:10.1016/j.jaci.2024.01.023
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Long-standing health inequalities in Australian society that were exposed by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) pandemic were described as “fault lines” in a recent call to action by a consortium of philanthropic organizations. With asthma a major contributor to childhood disease burden, studies of its spatial epidemiology can provide valuable insights into the emergence of health inequalities early in life.

Objective

The aims of this study were to characterize the spatial variation of asthma prevalence among children living within Australia’s 4 largest cities and quantify the relative contributions of climatic and environmental factors, outdoor air pollution, and socioeconomic status in determining this variation.

Methods

A Bayesian model with spatial smoothing was developed to regress ecologic health status data from the 2021 Australian Census against groups of explanatory covariates intended to represent mechanistic pathways.

Results

The prevalence of asthma in children aged 5 to 14 years averages 7.9%, 8.2%, 8.5%, and 7.6% in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, and Perth, respectively. This small inter-city variation contrasts against marked intracity variation at the small-area level, which ranges from 6% to 12% between the least and most affected locations in each. Statistical variance decomposition on a subsample of Australian-born, nonindigenous children attributes 66% of the intracity spatial variation to the assembled covariates. Of these covariates, climatic and environmental factors contribute 30%, outdoor air pollution contributes 19%, and areal socioeconomic status contributes the remaining 51%.

Conclusion

Geographic health inequalities in the prevalence of childhood asthma within Australia’s largest cities reflect a complex interplay of factors, among which socioeconomic status is a principal determinant.

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澳大利亚城市儿童哮喘发病率的健康不平等分析。
背景:严重急性呼吸系统综合症冠状病毒 2(SARS-CoV-2)大流行暴露出澳大利亚社会长期存在的健康不平等问题,慈善组织联盟最近呼吁采取行动,将这些问题描述为 "断层线"。哮喘是造成儿童疾病负担的一个主要因素,对哮喘空间流行病学的研究可以为了解生命早期健康不平等的出现提供有价值的见解:本研究旨在描述澳大利亚四大城市儿童哮喘发病率的空间变化特征,并量化气候和环境因素、室外空气污染以及社会经济状况在决定这种变化时的相对作用:方法:建立了一个具有空间平滑功能的贝叶斯模型,将 2021 年澳大利亚人口普查中的生态健康状况数据与旨在代表机理途径的解释性协变量组进行回归:悉尼、墨尔本、布里斯班和珀斯 5 至 14 岁儿童的哮喘患病率平均分别为 7.9%、8.2%、8.5% 和 7.6%。这种城市间的微小差异与城市内部小区域层面的显著差异形成鲜明对比,每个城市中受影响最小和最严重地区之间的差异从 6% 到 12% 不等。对澳大利亚出生的非土著儿童的子样本进行统计方差分解后发现,66%的城市内空间变化归因于所收集的协变量。在这些协变量中,气候和环境因素占30%,室外空气污染占19%,其余的51%归因于地区社会经济状况:结论:澳大利亚最大城市中儿童哮喘发病率的地域健康不平等反映了各种因素之间复杂的相互作用,其中社会经济地位是主要的决定因素。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
25.90
自引率
7.70%
发文量
1302
审稿时长
38 days
期刊介绍: The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology is a prestigious publication that features groundbreaking research in the fields of Allergy, Asthma, and Immunology. This influential journal publishes high-impact research papers that explore various topics, including asthma, food allergy, allergic rhinitis, atopic dermatitis, primary immune deficiencies, occupational and environmental allergy, and other allergic and immunologic diseases. The articles not only report on clinical trials and mechanistic studies but also provide insights into novel therapies, underlying mechanisms, and important discoveries that contribute to our understanding of these diseases. By sharing this valuable information, the journal aims to enhance the diagnosis and management of patients in the future.
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