新西兰学龄前儿童发育健康困难的患病率和预测因素:潜在概况分析

IF 2.1 4区 综合性期刊 Q2 MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.1080/03036758.2022.2083188
J. Russell, C. Grant, S. Morton, S. Denny, Sarah-Jane Paine (Tūhoe)
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引用次数: 4

摘要

新西兰关于儿童发育健康结果不平等的研究很少。我们的目的是描述学龄前儿童发育健康的患病率、聚类和社会环境关联。使用来自新西兰4.5岁儿童参与者的数据进行潜在特征分析,以确定发育健康状况的特征。潜在概况分析包括7项措施,代表发育健康的四个领域:“身体”、“运动”、“社会情感和行为”以及“沟通和学习”。使用多项逻辑回归来调查潜在剖面隶属度的社会环境关联。六种潜在特征被确定(N = 6109),包括三种健康/繁荣特征:“健康”(52.6%的样本),“早期社交技能繁荣”(14.5%)和“早期学习技能繁荣”(4.0%);还有三个次优特征:“早期学习技能困难”(19.5%)、“身体健康困难”(5.6%)和“发育困难群”(3.7%)。处于社会经济劣势、Māori或太平洋族裔以及医疗保健需求未得到满足的儿童被归类为次优发育健康状况的几率增加。在这个庞大而多样化的队列中,四分之一的儿童被归类为发育健康欠佳。解决发育健康方面的不公平现象对于改善整个生命过程中的健康至关重要。
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Prevalence and predictors of developmental health difficulties within New Zealand preschool-aged children: a latent profile analysis
ABSTRACT New Zealand research on inequities in children’s developmental health outcomes is sparse. We aimed to describe the prevalence, clustering, and socio-environmental associations of developmental health in preschool-aged children. A latent profile analysis was performed using data from child participants of Growing Up in New Zealand at age 4.5-years to identify profiles of developmental health status. Seven measures were included in the latent profile analysis, representing four domains of developmental health: ‘physical’, ‘motor’, ‘socioemotional and behavioural’, and ‘communication and learning’. Multinominal logistic regression was used to investigate socio-environmental associations of latent profile membership. Six latent profiles were identified (N = 6109), including three healthy/flourishing profiles: ‘healthy’ (52.6% of the sample), ‘early social skills flourishing’ (14.5%), and ‘early learning skills flourishing’ (4.0%); and three suboptimal profiles: ‘early learning skills difficulties’ (19.5%), ‘physical health difficulties’ (5.6%), and ‘developmental difficulties cluster’ (3.7%). Children experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage, of Māori or Pacific ethnicity, and with unmet healthcare needs had increased odds of being classified to suboptimal developmental health profiles. In this large, diverse cohort, one-in-four children were classified as having suboptimal developmental health. Addressing inequities in developmental health is crucial to improving health over the life course.
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来源期刊
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand
Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand 综合性期刊-综合性期刊
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
74
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Aims: The Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand reflects the role of Royal Society Te Aparangi in fostering research and debate across natural sciences, social sciences, and the humanities in New Zealand/Aotearoa and the surrounding Pacific. Research published in Journal of the Royal Society of New Zealand advances scientific knowledge, informs government policy, public awareness and broader society, and is read by researchers worldwide.
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