四分位数
医学
冲程(发动机)
优势比
人口学
人口
背景(考古学)
健康的社会决定因素
可能性
老年学
置信区间
逻辑回归
公共卫生
内科学
环境卫生
生物
工程类
社会学
机械工程
古生物学
护理部
作者
Safi U. Khan,Isaac Acquah,Zulqarnain Javed,Javier Valero‐Elizondo,Tamer Yahya,Ron Blankstein,Salim S. Virani,Michael J. Blaha,Adnan A. Hyder,Prachi Dubey,Farhaan Vahidy,Miguel Cainzos‐Achirica,Khurram Nasir
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.mayocp.2021.08.024
摘要
Objective To examine the association of social determinants of health (SDOH) on prevalence of stroke in non-elderly adults (<65 years of age). Methods We used the National Health Interview Survey (2013–2017) database. The study population was stratified into younger (<45 years of age) and middle age (45 to 64 years of age) adults. For each individual, an SDOH aggregate score was calculated representing the cumulative number of individual unfavorable SDOH (present vs absent), identified from 39 subcomponents across five domains (economic stability, neighborhood, community and social context, food, education, and health care system access) and divided into quartiles (quartile 1, most favorable; quartile 4, most unfavorable). Multivariable models tested the association between SDOH score quartiles and stroke. Results The age-adjusted prevalence of stroke was 1.4% in the study population (n=123,631; 58.2% (n=71,956) in patients <45 years of age). Young adults reported approximately 20% of all strokes. Participants with stroke had unfavorable responses to 36 of 39 SDOH; nearly half (48%) of all strokes were reported by participants in the highest SDOH score quartile. A stepwise increase in age-adjusted stroke prevalence was observed across increasing quartiles of SDOH (first, 0.6%; second, 0.9%; third, 1.4%; and fourth, 2.9%). After accounting for demographics and cardiovascular disease risk factors, participants in the fourth vs first quartile had higher odds of stroke (odds ratio, 2.78; 95% CI, 2.25 to 3.45). Conclusion Nearly half of all non-elderly individuals with stroke have an unfavorable SDOH profile. Standardized assessment of SDOH risk burden may inform targeted strategies to mitigate disparities in stroke burden and outcomes in this population.
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