| Literature DB >> 17967177 |
Andrew J Karter1, Mark R Stevens, Arleen F Brown, O Kenrik Duru, Edward W Gregg, Tiffany L Gary, Gloria L Beckles, Chien-Wen Tseng, David G Marrero, Beth Waitzfelder, William H Herman, John D Piette, Monika M Safford, Susan L Ettner.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Our understanding of social disparities in diabetes-related health behaviors is incomplete. The purpose of this study was to determine if having less education is associated with poorer diabetes-related health behaviors.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17967177 PMCID: PMC2238766 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-308
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Subject characteristics, quality of care, provider communications, and out-of-pocket charges for the TRIAD study respondents (n = 8,763)*
| Sex | Women | 4687 (53.5) |
| Men | 4076 (46.5) | |
| Age | 25–44 | 816 (9.3) |
| 45–64 | 4252 (48.6) | |
| 65 or older | 3684 (42.1) | |
| Race or Ethnicity | Latino | 1291 (15.8) |
| Black, non-Latino | 1260 (15.4) | |
| White, non-Latino | 3594 (44.0) | |
| Asian/Pacific Islander | 1304 (16.0) | |
| Other | 720 (8.8) | |
| Annual Household Income | < $15,000 | 2017 (24.3) |
| $15,001 – 40,000 | 2783 (33.6) | |
| $40,001 – 75,000 | 2066 (24.9) | |
| > $75,000 | 1424 (17.1) | |
| Education | Less than high school graduate | 1773 (20.8) |
| High school graduate | 2530 (29.7) | |
| Some college | 2496 (29.3) | |
| College graduate | 1720 (20.2) | |
| Diabetes treatment | Diet and exercise only | 604 (7.0) |
| Oral agents only | 5215 (60.0) | |
| Insulin alone or in combination | 2868 (33.0) | |
| Comorbidity Score** | No history of serious events | 6017 (73.5) |
| History of one or more serious events | 2166 (26.5) | |
| Health plan location | California | 1771 (20.2) |
| Hawaii | 2023 (23.1) | |
| Indiana | 904 (10.3) | |
| Michigan | 1268 (14.5) | |
| New Jersey | 1259 (14.4) | |
| Texas | 1538 (17.6) | |
*Complete data only
**Summary score based on whether or not there is a history of myocardial infarct, CABG, PTCA, stroke, or amputation
Model-based* predicted probability estimates (95% confidence intervals) for self-reported health behaviors across levels of educational attainment, income, social class and parental educational attainment. Translating Research Into Action (TRIAD) Study.
| Socioeconomic Indicator | Smoking (%) | Regular exercise (%) | Daily foot self-exam (%) | Health-seeking behavior (%) | Daily SMBG† (%) |
| Less than High School graduate | 24.0 (20.8–27.5) | 41.9 (37.2–46.7) | 70.8 (65.6–75.4) | 20.8 (16.9–25.3) | 71.6 (62.4–79.3) |
| High School graduate | 17.9 (15.8–20.2) | 43.4 (39.2–47.7) | 65.7 (61.3–69.9) | 23.8 (19.9–28.2) | 72.8 (66.3–78.4) |
| Some college/trade school | 17.6 (15.6–19.8) | 48.4 (44.1–52.7) | 68.7 (64.4–72.6) | 30.1 (25.6–35.0) | 77.7 (72.2–82.5) |
| College graduate | 10.4 (8.6–12.4) | 50.2 (45.6–54.8) | 67.3 (61.9–72.3) | 33.1 (28.2–38.5) | 77.1 (71.0–82.3) |
| p-value | < 0.0001 | 0.0001 | 0.3 | < 0.0001 | 0.4 |
| < $15 K | 22.8 (19.6–26.4) | 36.0 (31.7–40.6) | 68.3 (62.2–73.8) | 20.8 (17.1–25.1) | 75.1 (66.3–82.2) |
| $15 K – $40 K | 19.3 (17.0–21.7) | 44.4 (40.3–48.6) | 66.8 (61.3–71.9) | 26.0 (22.1–30.4) | 74.9 (69.1–79.8) |
| $40 K – $75 K | 15.3 (13.2–17.6) | 49.7 (45.4–54.1) | 66.7 (60.5–72.3) | 27.7 (23.5–32.4) | 71.9 (65.5–77.6) |
| > $75 K | 11.4 (9.4–13.8) | 56.0 (51.2–60.8) | 63.9 (56.5–70.7) | 31.4 (26.5–36.7) | 79.2 (72.3–84.7) |
| p-value | < 0.0001 | < 0.0001 | 0.7 | < 0.0001 | 0.4 |
| Worker | 17.3 (15.2–19.6) | 41.6 (38.1–45.2) | 66.6 (62.4–70.6) | 23.9 (20.0–28.3) | 78.2 (73.1–82.6) |
| Supervisor | 17.5 (14.7–20.6) | 46.0 (41.7–50.3) | 70.3 (64.8–75.2) | 25.3 (20.8–30.3) | 72.2 (64.4–78.9) |
| Manager | 17.2 (15.2–19.4) | 49.4 (45.9–52.8) | 67.7 (63.7–71.4) | 29.5 (25.1–34.3) | 74.9 (70.1–79.0) |
| p-value | 0.99 | < 0.0001 | 0.5 | < 0.0001 | 0.3 |
| Less than High School graduate | 16.8 (14.7–19.1) | 43.9 (39.9–48.0) | 68.3 (65.1–71.4) | 24.9 (20.0–30.5) | 73.9 (67.8–79.2) |
| High School graduate | 16.6 (14.5–19.0) | 48.5 (44.2–52.7) | 67.0 (63.4–70.5) | 27.6 (22.3–33.6) | 74.6 (68.8–79.6) |
| Some college/trade school | 18.1 (15.3–21.3) | 48.8 (44.0–53.7) | 65.4 (60.1–70.4) | 29.7 (23.8–36.3) | 78.2 (71.0–84.1) |
| College graduate | 16.6 (13.5–20.1) | 49.7 (44.5–55.0) | 72.3 (65.9–77.9) | 31.9 (25.5–39.0) | 81.8 (74.1–87.5) |
| p-value | 0.8 | 0.01 | 0.4 | 0.003 | 0.3 |
*Each behavior is modeled separately using hierarchical logistic regression models, specifying random intercepts for health plan and adjusting for demographics (sex, age, race or ethnicity), socioeconomic indicators (only the one specified as the table row heading), severity measures (diabetes treatment, comorbidity score, duration of diabetes), comorbidity score, depressive symptoms, and employment status.
†Insulin users only and adjusted for coverage for test strips
§Social class defined by Olin-Wright classification
Model-based* predicted probability estimates (95% confidence intervals) for self-reported health behaviors from multivariate models adjusting simultaneously for educational attainment and income. Translating Research Into Action (TRIAD) Study.
| Socioeconomic Indicator | Smoking (%) | Regular exercise (%) | Daily foot self-exam (%) | Health-seeking behavior (%) | Daily SMBG† (%) |
| Less than High School graduate | 22.9 (19.9–26.2) | 45.6 (41.5–49.6) | 70.4 (65.6–74.8) | 22.8 (19.4–26.6) | 72.2 (66.4–77.3) |
| High School graduate | 17.3 (15.4–19.3) | 44.2 (41.1–47.5) | 65.9 (62.2–69.4) | 25.0 (22.1–28.1) | 76.0 (71.9–79.8) |
| Some college/trade school | 18.2 (16.4–20.2) | 48.5 (45.3–51.6) | 68.6 (65.1–72.0) | 31.1 (28.0–34.4) | 75.5 (71.5–79.1) |
| College graduate | 11.0 (9.2–13.1) | 48.3 (44.7–52.0) | 67.7 (62.7–72.2) | 33.3 (29.7–37.1) | 76.3 (71.1–80.8) |
| p-value | < 0.0001 | 0.08 | 0.5 | < 0.0001 | 0.7 |
| < $15 K | 21.1 (18.2–24.3) | 37.2 (33.5–41.1) | 69.5 (65.1–73.6) | 24.5 (21.1–28.3) | 74.4 (69.1–79.1) |
| $15 K – $40 K | 18.6 (16.7–20.7) | 45.2 (42.1–48.3) | 68.0 (64.6–71.2) | 28.8 (25.8–32.0) | 76.6 (72.8–80.1) |
| $40 K – $75 K | 15.9 (13.9–18.1) | 50.1 (46.7–53.5) | 68.0 (63.7–72.1) | 29.2 (26.0–32.6) | 71.9 (66.8–76.4) |
| > $75 K | 12.79 (10.7–15.4) | 55.9 (51.9–59.9) | 64.9 (58.9–70.4) | 31.7 (27.9–35.8) | 78.4 (72.4–83.4) |
| p-value | 0.0012 | < 0.0001 | 0.7 | 0.04 | 0.2 |
* Each behavior is modeled separately using hierarchical logistic regression models, specifying random intercepts for health plan and adjusting for demographics (sex, age, race or ethnicity), socioeconomic indicators (only the one specified as the table row heading), severity measures (diabetes treatment, comorbidity score, duration of diabetes), comorbidity score, depressive symptoms, and employment status.
†Insulin users only and adjusted for coverage for test strips
Figure 1Count of self-reported self-care behaviors* across levels of educational attainment. . *Counts by level of education were based on least square means from hierarchical regression models accounting for clustering within health plans and adjusted for sex, age, race or ethnicity, preferred language, health plan location, diabetes treatment, and the presence of comorbidities. For non-insulin treated patients, there were 4 possible self-care behaviors: 1) not smoking; 2) regular exercise (≥ 10 minutes of walking daily and/or moderate leisure time physical activity on a regular basis); 3) daily foot exam; 4) health seeking behavior (use of diabetes website, support group, health education); and a fifth for insulin-treated patients only, 5) daily self-monitoring of blood glucose. In both cases, relationships were significant (p < 0.001).