| Literature DB >> 24885151 |
Tatiana Dubikaytis, Tommi Härkänen, Elena Regushevskaya1, Elina Hemminki, Elina Haavio-Mannila, Made Laanpere, Olga Kuznetsova, Seppo Koskinen.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Social determinants of health have not been intensively studied in Russia, even though the health divide has been clearly demonstrated by an increased mortality rate among those with low education. A comparative analysis of social health determinants in countries with different historical and economic backgrounds may provide useful evidence for addressing health inequalities. We aimed to assess socioeconomic determinants of self-rated health in St. Petersburg as compared to Estonia and Finland.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24885151 PMCID: PMC4038079 DOI: 10.1186/1475-9276-13-39
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Equity Health ISSN: 1475-9276
Age-adjusted means, proportions or distributions of the explanatory variables by country
| | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 130,1 ± 5,5 | 243,0 ± 4,3 | 874,9 ± 14,4 | ||
| | | | ||
| < 11 (<10)b | | 5 | 6 | 6 |
| 11-13 (10–12) | | 41 | 45 | 27 |
| 14-16 (13–15) | | 42 | 35 | 38 |
| 17+ (16+) | | 11 | 13 | 30 |
| | | | ||
| Partner & child/children | | 36 | 45 | 44 |
| Only partner, no child/children | | 24 | 19 | 24 |
| No partner no child/children | | 29 | 22 | 23 |
| Only child/children, no partner | | 11 | 13 | 9 |
| | | | ||
| Employed | | 76 | 56 | 64 |
| Student | | 11 | 24 | 16 |
| Unemployed | | 3 | 4 | 9 |
| Housewives | | 10 | 15 | 11 |
| | | | ||
| Under 20 | | 26 | 26 | 16 |
| 20-24.9 | | 49 | 51 | 52 |
| 25-29.9 | | 16 | 17 | 22 |
| 30+ | | 9 | 7 | 10 |
| | | | ||
| Never | | 41 | 52 | 58 |
| In past | | 14 | 18 | 14 |
| Occasional | | 14 | 8 | 5 |
| Current | | 31 | 22 | 23 |
| | | | | |
| Yes vs. no | 38 | 24 | 29 | |
| 1 | 1 | 2 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 9 | ||
| 6 | 4 | 2 | ||
| 25 | 13 | 16 |
apensioners and women with missing values in any of the studied variables were excluded.
byears of education in brackets corresponds to Finnish population.
cWald test for comparing countries.
Distribution of women by their age-adjusted self-rated health by country, %
| (Number of women) | (865) | (2141) | (1897) |
| Very satisfied | 6 | 16 | 56 |
| Satisfied | 30 | 48 | 36 |
| Neither satisfied nor dissatisfied | 32 | 23 | 6 |
| Dissatisfied and very dissatisfied | 32 | 12 | 2 |
| Total | 100 | 100 | 100 |
Cumulative OR with 95% CI for self-rated health (1 = best health and 5 = poorest health) by socioeconomic, behaviour factors and longstanding illness among women in St. Petersburg
| pf < 0.01 | pf < 0.05 | pf <0.10 | pf ns | |
| < 11 yrs | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 11–13 yrs | 0.67 [0.41–1.09] | 0.65# [0.39–1.07] | 0.64 [0.39–1.06] | 0.65 [0.38–1.12] |
| 14–16 yrs | 0.51** [0.32–0.82] | 0.52* [0.31–0.85] | 0.54* [0.33–0.89] | 0.55* [0.32–0.96] |
| 17+ yrs | 0.42** [0.23–0.77] | 0.40** [0.22–0.75] | 0.46* [0.25–0.87] | 0.46* [0.23–0.91] |
| pf ns | pf ns | pf ns | pf ns | |
| Lowest quartile | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 2nd quartile | 1.17 [0.80–1.69] | 0.87 [0.56–1.36] | 0.88 [0.56–1.38] | 0.87 [0.55–1.39] |
| 3rd quartile | 1.00 [0.69–1.45] | 0.77 [0.49–1.21] | 0.82 [0.52–1.30] | 0.79 [0.50–1.26] |
| Highest quartile | 0.85 [0.60–1.21] | 0.69 [0.44–1.08] | 0.69 [0.44–1.08] | 0.65# [0.41–1.04] |
| pf ns | pf < 0.05 | pf < 0.10 | pf < 0.10 | |
| Employed | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Student | 0.77 [0.49–1.19] | 0.74 [0.44–1.23] | 0.78 [0.46–1.32] | 0.66 [0.37–1.17] |
| Unemployed | 1.32 [0.72–2.42] | 1.04 [0.54–2.01] | 1.04 [0.54–2.02] | 1.09 [0.58–2.06] |
| Housewives | 0.66# [0.42–1.03] | 0.47* [0.27–0.83] | 0.48* [0.27–0.86] | 0.50* [0.28–0.89] |
| pf ns | pf ns | pf ns | pf ns | |
| Child & partner | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Only partner | 1.01 [0.74–1.38] | 1.00 [0.72–1.38] | 0.89 [0.64–1.25] | 0.97 [0.68–1.38] |
| No children no partner | 0.87 [0.62–1.22] | 0.85 [0.59–1.23] | 0.79 [0.55–1.14] | 0.78 [0.54–1.13] |
| Only children | 0.98 [0.67–1.44] | 0.90 [0.61–1.34] | 0.92 [0.62–1.37] | 0.84 [0.55–1.28] |
| pf <0.10 | | pf ns | pf ns | |
| Never | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| In past | 1.26 [0.84–1.87] | | 1.19 [0.78–1.80] | 1.23 [0.80–1.90] |
| Occasional | 1.04 [0.74–1.47] | | 1.01 [0.71–1.44] | 1.04 [0.72–1.50] |
| Current | 1.44* [1.07–1.93] | | 1.31# [0.97–1.78] | 1.34# [0.98–1.82] |
| pf <0.001 | | pf <0.01 | pf <0.05 | |
| Under 20 | 1.24 [0.90–1.72] | | 1.27 [0.91–1.78] | 1.16 [0.82–1.65] |
| 20–24.9 | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 25–29.9 | 1.66** [1.19–2.30] | | 1.63** [1.15–2.31] | 1.45* [1.02–2.06] |
| 30+ | 2.44** [1.57–3.79] | | 2.33*** [1.48–3.67] | 1.95** [1.23–3.12] |
| pf ns | | | pf ns | |
| Yes vs. no | 1.86 [0.15–22.4] | | | 4.53 [0.26–77.66] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 2.31*** [1.44–3.70] | | | 3.75 *** [2.27–6.18] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 2.79*** [1.86–4.19] | | | 4.49*** [2.91–6.92] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 3.15*** [2.40–4.14] | 4.47*** [3.31–6.04] |
SEP = socioeconomic position, BMI = body mass index.
aModel I SRH = age + one of the explanatory variables (education, personal income, employment status, family structure, BMI, smoking, chronic diseases).
bElaboration analysis by adding a group of explanatory variables in the model allows one to assess the mediation effect of the group of new variables.
cModel II SRH = age + SEP variables (education + personal income + employment status + family structure).
dModel III SRH = age + SEP variables + behaviour variables (BMI + smoking).
eModel IV SRH = age + SEP variables + behaviour variables + chronic diseases.
fWald test for significance of the cumulative OR difference between the categories of the variable, #p < 0.1; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ns not significant.
Cumulative OR with 95% CI for self-rated health (1 = best health and 5 = poorest health) by socioeconomic, behaviour factors and longstanding illness among women in Estonia
| pg < 0.001 | pg <0.05 | pg ns | pg ns | |
| < 11 yrs | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 11–13 | 0.58* [0.39–0.88] | 0.62* [0.41–0.94] | 0.69# [0.46–1.05] | 0.77 [0.49–1.19] |
| 14–16 | 0.45*** [0.29–0.68] | 0.53** [0.35–0.81] | 0.62* [0.41–0.96] | 0.70 [0.44–1.11] |
| 17+ | 0.38*** [0.24–0.61] | 0.52** [0.32–0.84] | 0.65# [0.40–1.08] | 0.73 [0.43–1.22] |
| pg <0.001 | pg < 0.001 | pg <0.001 | pg < 0.01 | |
| Lowest quartile | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 2nd quartile | 0.90 [0.71–1.15] | 0.91 [0.71–1.16] | 0.89 [0.69–1.14] | 0.91 [0.70–1.18] |
| 3rd quartile | 0.69** [0.53–0.90] | 0.69* [0.50–0.95] | 0.68* [0.49–0.93] | 0.65** [0.47–0.90] |
| Highest quartile | 0.50*** [0.39–0.65] | 0.53*** [0.39–0.73] | 0.52*** [0.38–0.71] | 0.58** [0.42–0.79] |
| pg <0.05 | pg ns | pg ns | pg ns | |
| Employed | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Student | 1.04 [0.81–1.33] | 0.89 [0.67–1.19] | 0.91 [0.69–1.21] | 0.82 [0.61–1.10] |
| Unemployed | 1.84** [1.22–2.78] | 1.18 [0.76–1.82] | 1.16 [0.74–1.80] | 1.31 [0.83–2.07] |
| Housewives | 1.07 [0.82–1.38] | 0.84 [0.62–1.14] | 0.83 [0.62–1.13] | 0.78 [0.58–1.06] |
| pg <0.05 | pg <0.05 | pg <0.10 | pg ns | |
| Child & partner | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Only partner | 1.02 [0.81–1.30] | 1.10 [0.86–1.41] | 1.10 [0.86–1.41] | 1.00 [0.78–1.28] |
| No children no partner | 1.00 [0.78–1.27] | 1.02 [0.78–1.33] | 1.06 [0.81–1.38] | 1.06 [0.81–1.40] |
| Only children | 1.47** [1.13–1.90] | 1.46** [1.12–1.90] | 1.45** [1.11–1.89] | 1.35* [1.02–1.78] |
| pg <0.001 | | pg <0.001 | pg < 0.01 | |
| Never | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| In past | 1.27* [1.01–1.58] | | 1.29* [1.03–1.62] | 1.22# [0.97–1.54] |
| Occasional | 1.32# [0.9–1.81] | | 1.25 [0.91–1.72] | 1.21 [0.88–1.66] |
| Current | 1.75*** [1.41–2.17] | | 1.58*** [1.26–1.98] | 1.51*** [1.20–1.90] |
| pg <0.001 | | pg < 0.01 | pg <0.05 | |
| Under 20 | 0.97 [0.79–1.19] | | 0.96 [0.78–1.18] | 0.92 [0.75–1.13] |
| 20–24.9 | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 25–29.9 | 1.38* [1.08–1.76] | | 1.33* [1.04–1.69] | 1.36* [1.07–1.75] |
| 30+ | 1.90*** [1.34–2.71] | | 1.69** [1.18–2.43] | 1.42# [0.96–2.09] |
| pg <0.001 | | | pg <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 4.48*** [2.38–8.41] | | | 7.55*** [3.61–15.78] |
| pg <0.001 | | | pg <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 3.64*** [2.67–4.98] | | | 4.90*** [3.46–6.94] |
| pg <0.001 | | | pg <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 4.02*** [2.73–5.93] | | | 4.86*** [3.21–7.38] |
| pg <0.001 | | | pg <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 4.09*** [3.24–5.16] | | | 5.53*** [4.28–7.16] |
| pg < 0.001 | pg < 0.001 | pg < 0.001 | pg <0.001 | |
| 2.51*** [2.05–3.07] | 2.12*** [1.72–2.61] | 2.05 [1.66–2.53] | 1.92 [1.55–2.38] |
SEP = socioeconomic position; BMI = body mass index.
aAll the associations were adjusted for language Russian vs. Estonian.
bModel I SRH = age + one of the explanatory variables (education, personal income, employment status, family structure, BMI, smoking, chronic diseases).
cElaboration analysis by adding a group of explanatory variables in the model allows one to assess the mediation effect of the group of new variables.
dModel II SRH = age + education + personal income + employment status + family structure (SEP variables).
eModel III SRH = age + SEP variables + BMI + smoking.
fModel IV SRH = age + SEP variables + behaviour variables + chronic diseases.
gWald test for significance of the cumulative OR difference between the categories of the variable.
#p < 0.1; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ns not significant.
Cumulative OR with 95% CI for self-rated health (1 = best health and 5 = poorest health) by socioeconomic, behaviour factors and longstanding illness among women in Finland
| pf < 0.001 | pf <0.001 | pf <0.001 | pf <0.001 | |
| <10 yrs | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 10–12 yrs | 0.69# [0.46–1.02] | 0.78 [0.52–1.16] | 0.83 [0.56–1.24] | 0.87 [0.58–1.30] |
| 13–15 yrs | 0.52** [0.36–0.76] | 0.60** [0.41–0.88] | 0.69# [0.47–1.01] | 0.77 [0.52–1.14] |
| 16+ yrs | 0.35*** [0.23–0.52] | 0.40*** [0.27–0.60] | 0.47*** [0.31–0.72] | 0.51** [0.34–0.77] |
| pf <0.001 | pf <0.01 | pf <0.01 | pf <0.01 | |
| Lowest quartile | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 2nd quartile | 0.61** [0.46–0.81] | 0.68** [0.51–0.89] | 0.71* [0.53–0.94] | 0.75# [0.56–1.00] |
| 3rd quartile | 0.47*** [0.35–0.62] | 0.58** [0.43–0.79] | 0.60** [0.44–0.82] | 0.63** [0.46–0.86] |
| Highest quartile | 0.51*** [0.38–0.68] | 0.74# [0.53–1.02] | 0.79 [0.57–1.10] | 0.85 [0.61–1.17] |
| pf <0.001 | pf ns | pf ns | pf ns | |
| Employed | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Student | 1.31# [0.96–1.78] | 1.19 [0.85–1.67] | 1.26 [0.90–1.77] | 1.20 [0.86–1.69] |
| Unemployed | 2.10*** [1.50–2.92] | 1.58* [1.08–2.31] | 1.53* [1.05–2.24] | 1.31 [0.90–1.90] |
| Housewives | 1.40* [1.01–1.92] | 1.21 [0.86–1.71] | 1.24 [0.88–1.75] | 1.13 [0.78–1.63] |
| pf <0.10 | pf ns | pf ns | pf <0.05 | |
| Child & partner | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| Only partner | 1.04 [0.81–1.34] | 1.12 [0.85–1.47] | 1.13 [0.86–1.48] | 1.17 [0.89–1.53] |
| No children no partner | 0.95 [0.71–1.26] | 0.91 [0.67–1.24] | 0.84 [0.62–1.15] | 0.80 [0.58–1.10] |
| Only children | 1.50* [1.08–2.09] | 1.24 [0.89–1.73] | 1.26 [0.89–1.76] | 1.29 [0.90–1.84] |
| pf <0.001 | | pf <0.01 | pf <0.001 | |
| Never | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| In past | 1.05 [0.81–1.36] | | 0.92 [0.70–1.21] | 0.95 [0.72–1.25] |
| Occasional | 0.61* [0.38–0.99] | | 0.56* [0.34–0.92] | 0.50** [0.30–0.84] |
| Current | 1.60*** [1.29–1.98] | | 1.29* [1.02–1.62] | 1.32* [1.04–1.67] |
| pf <0.001 | | pf <0.001 | pf <0.001 | |
| Under 20 | 1.27# [0.97–1.67] | | 1.19 [0.90–1.57] | 1.21 [0.92–1.58] |
| 20–24.9 | 1.00 | | 1.00 | 1.00 |
| 25–29.9 | 1.40** [1.13–1.75] | | 1.34* [1.07–1.68] | 1.34* [1.06–1.70] |
| 30+ | 3.02*** [2.28–4.02] | | 2.85*** [2.13–3.81] | 2.36*** [1.75–3.18] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 10.4*** [5.86–19.15] | | | 10.90*** [5.41–21.96] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 4.36*** [3.26–5.83] | | | 4.57*** [3.34–6.25] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 3.76*** [2.17–6.52] | | | 3.02*** [1.72–5.31] |
| pf <0.001 | | | pf <0.001 | |
| Yes vs. no | 1.82*** [1.44–2.30] | 2.59*** [1.98–3.39] |
aModel I SRH = age + one of the explanatory variables (education, personal income, employment status, family structure, BMI, smoking, chronic diseases).
bElaboration analysis by adding a group of explanatory variables in the model allows one to assess the mediation effect of the group of new variables.
cModel II SRH = age + education + personal income + employment status + family structure (SEP variables).
dModel III SRH = age + SEP variables + BMI + smoking.
eModel IV SRH = age + SEP variables + behaviour variables + chronic diseases.
fWald test for significance of the cumulative OR difference between the categories of the variable.
#p < 0.1; *p < 0.05; **p < 0.01; ***p < 0.001; ns not significant.
SEP = socioeconomic position.
Figure 1Likelihood (odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals) of poor self-rated health by education (17+ years vs. < 11 years) in the three areas; age-adjusted model on the left and fully adjusted model on the right.
Figure 2Likelihood (odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals) of poor self-rated health by personal income (highest vs. lowest quartile) in the three areas; age-adjusted model on the left and fully adjusted model on the right.
Figure 3Likelihood (odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals) of poor self-rated health by unemployment (vs. employed) and being a housewife (vs. employed) in the three areas; age-adjusted model on the left and fully adjusted model on the right.