多重贫困导致苏格兰疾病负担的流行前不平等:一项回顾性研究

I. Grant, Neil Chalmers, E. Fletcher, F. Lakha, Gerry McCartney, D. Stockton, Grant M. A. Wyper
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摘要

苏格兰的保健不平等现象有据可查,包括不同原因对死亡率不平等的影响。我们的目的是在疾病负担框架内估计不平等,同时考虑过早死亡和发病率的影响,以了解在COVID-19大流行之前特定疾病对健康不平等的贡献。70种疾病和损伤原因的残疾调整生命年(DALYs)来源于苏格兰疾病负担研究。区域水平的剥夺是用苏格兰多重剥夺指数来衡量的。不平等通过范围来衡量,相对不平等指数、不平等斜率指数和可归因DALYs以最不贫困的十分位数作为参考来估计。总体疾病负担是最贫困地区的两倍(每10万人中有50305人死于残疾调整生命年vs 20955人死于残疾调整生命年),这主要是由于过早死亡率的不平等造成的。在最贫困地区,这一比率比平均人口比率高出48%左右(相对不平等指数=0.96),35%的DALYs归因于地区贫困的差异。2019年疾病负担的许多主要原因——心脏病、药物使用障碍、肺癌和慢性阻塞性肺病——也是疾病负担绝对和相对不平等的主要驱动因素。我们的研究证明了COVID-19大流行之前绝对和相对不平等的严重程度。鉴于大流行前死亡率趋势改善停滞不前,卫生不平等现象不断扩大,COVID-19又加剧了这些不平等现象,需要紧急关注政策以解决这一问题。
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Prepandemic inequalities in the burden of disease in Scotland due to multiple deprivation: a retrospective study
Health inequalities in Scotland are well documented, including the contribution of different causes to inequalities in mortality. Our aim was to estimate inequalities within a burden of disease framework, accounting for both premature mortality and the effects of morbidity, to understand the contribution of specific diseases to health inequalities prior to the COVID-19 pandemic.Disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) for 70 individual causes of disease and injury were sourced from the Scottish Burden of Disease Study. Area-level deprivation was measured using the Scottish Index of Multiple Deprivation. Inequalities were measured by the range, Relative Index of Inequality, Slope Index of Inequality and attributable DALYs were estimated by using the least deprived decile as a reference.The overall disease burden was double that in the most deprived areas (50 305 vs 20 955 DALYS per 100 000), largely driven by inequalities in premature mortality. The rate in the most deprived areas was around 48% higher than the mean population rate (Relative Index of Inequality=0.96), with 35% of DALYs attributed to differences in area-based deprivation. Many leading causes of disease burden in 2019—heart disease, drug use disorders, lung cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease—were also the leading drivers of absolute and relative inequalities in the disease burden.Our study evidences the extent of the stark levels of absolute and relative inequality prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Given prepandemic stalling of mortality trend improvements and widening health inequalities, and the exacerbation of these caused by COVID-19, urgent policy attention is required to address this.
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