| Literature DB >> 23360584 |
Xin Zhang1, Penny A Cook, Paulo J Lisboa, Ian H Jarman, Mark A Bellis.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Socioeconomic status gradients in health outcomes are well recognised and may operate in part through the psychological effect of observing disparities in affluence. At an area-level, we explored whether the deprivation differential between neighbouring areas influenced self-reported morbidity over and above the known effect of the deprivation of the area itself.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23360584 PMCID: PMC3623854 DOI: 10.1186/1476-072X-12-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Health Geogr ISSN: 1476-072X Impact factor: 3.918
Figure 1The distribution of the proportions of the population declaring a) ‘not good’ health (mean±SD, 0.92±0.16) and b) Limiting Long-Term Illness after log transformation, n=32482 small areas (mean±SD, 1.23±0.13).
Figure 2Relationship between target area deprivation and (log transformed) proportions of a) not good health and b) Limiting Long-Term Illness, n=32482 small areas (means±standard deviations). The target area deprivation is the Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007 (higher values define higher deprivation; units are arbitrary). The outcome variable is from the 2001 UK census for 32482 small areas across the whole of England.
Figure 3Relationship between deprivation differential and (log transformed) percentages of the population declaring a) not good health and b) Limiting Long-Term Illness, n=32482 small areas (means±standard deviations). The deprivation differential is calculated from the Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007 (higher values define higher deprivation; units are arbitrary). The outcome variable is from the 2001 UK census for 32482 small areas across the whole of England.
Regression models to explain the variation in percentage of the population declaring ‘not good health’ and limiting long-term illness
| Not good health | | | |
| Target area deprivation Standardized slope (ß1 value) | 0.655*** | N/A | 0.655*** |
| Deprivation differential Standardized slope (ß2 value) | N/A | 0.312*** | 0.312*** |
| Adjusted R2 | 0.429 | 0.097 | 0.526 |
| Limiting Long-Term Illness | | | |
| Target area deprivation Standardized slope (ß1 value) | 0.548*** | N/A | 0.548*** |
| Deprivation differential Standardized slope (ß2 value) | N/A | 0.278*** | 0.278*** |
| Adjusted R2 | 0.330 | 0.076 | 0.410 |
*** Significance level p< 0.001.
The predictor variables are target area deprivation and deprivation differential (derived from the Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007). The outcome variables are the log transformed percentages of the population declaring ‘not good’ health and the log transformed percentages of the population declaring LLTI (both from the 2001 UK census) for 32482 small areas across the whole of England. Two bivariate regression models regressed the target area deprivation and then the deprivation differential separately for each outcome variable. The multivariable regression model used two predictor variables together to predict each outcome variable.
Standardized β values for the relationship between deprivation and the percentage of the population declaring ‘not good health’ for two different data segmentations
| IMD thirds segementation | | | | |
| Upper third (most deprived) | 1 | 0.531*** | 0.221*** | 2.202 |
| Medium third (middle deprived) | 2 | 0.555*** | 0.513*** | 1.081 |
| Lower third (least deprived) | 3 | 0.732*** | 0.748*** | 0.978 |
| P2 categories segmentation | | | | |
| New Starters | 6 | 0.736*** | 0.237*** | 3.105 |
| Urban Challenge | 1 | 0.452*** | 0.200*** | 2.260 |
| Multicultural Centres | 3 | 0.604*** | 0.265*** | 2.279 |
| Qualified Metropolitan | 8 | 0.542*** | 0.246*** | 2.203 |
| Weathered Communities | 4 | 0.441*** | 0.252*** | 1.750 |
| Urban Producers | 5 | 0.627*** | 0.446*** | 1.405 |
| Disadvantaged Households | 2 | 0.701*** | 0.523*** | 1.340 |
| Senior Neighbourhoods | 9 | 0.541*** | 0.418*** | 1.294 |
| Suburban Stability | 7 | 0.534*** | 0.464*** | 1.150 |
| Country Orchards | 11 | 0.600*** | 0.577*** | 1.039 |
| Rooted Households | 10 | 0.555*** | 0.558*** | 1.008 |
| Blossoming Families | 12 | 0.601*** | 0.633*** | 0.949 |
| Mature oaks | 13 | 0.638*** | 0.688*** | 0.927 |
*** Significance level p< 0.001. The ranks of deprivation shows the order of deprivation for each cohort (13 = most affluent cohort, 1 = most deprived cohort).
Predictor variables are area deprivation and deprivation differential (Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007) and the outcome variable is the log transformed percentage of the population declaring ‘not good health’ (from the 2001 UK census) for 32482 small areas across the whole of England. The results (for two data segmentation-IMD thirds and People and Places P2) are ordered by decreasing dominance of the target area deprivation to the deprivation differential (ratio of the slopes, β1 to β2).
Table2Standardized β values for the relationship between deprivation and the percentage of the population declaring Limiting Long-Term Illness (LLTI) for two different data segmentations
| IMD thirds segementation | | | | |
| Upper third (most deprived) | 1 | 0.409*** | 0.112*** | 3.651 |
| Medium third (middle deprived) | 2 | 0.336*** | 0.298*** | 1.127 |
| Lower third (least deprived) | 3 | 0.577*** | 0.602*** | 0.958 |
| P2 categories segmentation | | | | |
| Urban Challenge | 1 | 0.409*** | 0.055*** | 7.436 |
| Qualified Metropolitan | 8 | 0.400*** | 0.056*** | 7.142 |
| New Starters | 6 | 0.659*** | 0.172*** | 3.831 |
| Multicultural Centres | 3 | 0.537*** | 0.179*** | 3.000 |
| Weathered Communities | 4 | 0.366*** | 0.158*** | 2.316 |
| Urban Producers | 5 | 0.643*** | 0.397*** | 1.619 |
| Disadvantaged Households | 2 | 0.706*** | 0.500*** | 1.412 |
| Senior Neighbourhoods | 9 | 0.386*** | 0.302*** | 1.278 |
| Suburban Stability | 7 | 0.426*** | 0.354*** | 1.203 |
| Rooted Households | 10 | 0.436*** | 0.404*** | 1.079 |
| Country Orchards | 11 | 0.567*** | 0.546*** | 1.038 |
| Blossoming Families | 12 | 0.550*** | 0.559*** | 0.983 |
| Mature oaks | 13 | 0.567*** | 0.606*** | 0.935 |
*** Significance level p< 0.001. The ranks of deprivation shows the order of deprivation for each cohort (13 = most affluent cohort, 1 = most deprived cohort).
Predictor variables are area deprivation and deprivation differential (Index of Multiple Deprivation 2007) and the outcome variable is log transformed percentages of the population declaring LLTI (from the 2001 UK census) for 32482 small areas across the whole of England. The results (for two data segmentation-IMD thirds and People and Places P2) are ordered by decreasing dominance of the target area deprivation to the deprivation differential (ratio of the slopes, β1 to β2).
P2 People & Places geodemographic people classification description [28]
| Mature Oaks | Mature Oaks are generally middle-aged and older people, with many aged 45 to 64 and past retirement age. The majority are married couples with teenage children still living with them, or grown up children who have left home. Jews and Protestants are common in this Tree. |
| Country Orchards | Most members of this Tree are aged 55 to 65, with many being past retirement age but few being older than 75. They tend to be married couples whose children have left home, although there are still some children in the younger households. |
| Blossoming Families | This Tree is mainly made up of families, often aged 25 to 54 who are either married or cohabiting. There are many infants and young children and some teenagers. |
| Rooted Households | This Tree is generally an older group but has a wide spread of age groups, ranging from young adults to those of pension age. Most are married couples and few have children living at home. They generally originate from the UK and most are Christians, with many in Northern Ireland being Protestants. |
| Qualified Metropolitans | This Tree is mainly made up of young adults, aged 16 to 35 who are cohabiting and do not have children. A large number are students and there are some single-person households. There is also a multicultural population. |
| Senior Neighbourhoods | Most members of this Tree are retired, aged 55 to 75 and over with a significant number being over 74, although some are late middle-aged. There are very few children and many people live on their own. |
| Suburban Stability | This Tree covers an extremely wide range of age groups, from young families with children right up to those over 75 years old. Many of the parents are unmarried. |
| New Starters | This Tree consists mainly of young people aged 16 to 34 with no children. There are a lot of students and people living alone. Some older households, aged 35 to 54, do have children but few of the couples are married, choosing to cohabit instead. There is also a mix of people from multicultural backgrounds. |
| Multicultural Centres | This Tree consists mainly of families, some of which are large, who originate from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh or Africa with a good proportion from the Caribbean and China. There is a combination of young parents with children and older parents with teenagers. The majority are Muslims or Jews and although the parents were born outside the UK, their children have been born here. |
| Urban Producers | This Tree has a high proportion of lone-parent families. Many households are couples, aged 25 to 34, who are unmarried and have children. There are also some people aged 16 to 24 with children. |
| Weathered Communities | Most of this Tree are past retirement age with many being older than 75 and living alone. |
| Disadvantaged Households | This is generally a young Tree, mainly made up of young parent families who are aged 16 to 34 and have young children. The proportion of married couples is relatively low, with many families being cohabiting couples or lone-parents. |
| Urban Challenge | The majority of people in this Tree are elderly. Some are over 75 and a high proportion live alone. |