| Literature DB >> 25424994 |
David Walsh1, Gerry McCartney2, Sarah McCullough2, Duncan Buchanan3, Russell Jones1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: High levels of 'excess' mortality (ie, that seemingly not explained by deprivation) have been shown for Scotland compared to England and Wales and, especially, for its largest city, Glasgow, compared to the similarly deprived English cities of Liverpool and Manchester. It has been suggested that this excess may be related to differences in 'Sense of Coherence' (SoC) between the populations. The aim of this study was to ascertain whether levels of SoC differed between these cities and whether, therefore, this could be a plausible explanation for the 'excess'.Entities:
Keywords: EPIDEMIOLOGY; PUBLIC HEALTH; SOCIAL MEDICINE
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25424994 PMCID: PMC4248084 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2014-005792
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Independent variables used in regression modelling analyses
| Variable | Categories |
|---|---|
| City of residence | Glasgow* |
| Liverpool | |
| Manchester | |
| Gender | Male* |
| Female | |
| Age | 16–29* |
| 30–44 | |
| 45–64 | |
| 65 and older | |
| Social grade | A (higher managerial, administrative or professional) and |
| C1 (supervisory, clerical and junior managerial, administrative or professional) | |
| C2 (skilled manual workers) | |
| D (semi and unskilled manual workers) | |
| E (on state benefits/unemployed/lowest grade workers) | |
| Employment status | Employed (PT/FT)* |
| Unemployed | |
| Ill/disabled | |
| Retired | |
| Looking after home/family | |
| In education/training (PT/FT) | |
| Educational attainment | No qualifications* |
| Some qualifications, but not degree level‡ | |
| 1st degree and above (includes NVQ/SVQ Level 5 or equivalent)§ | |
| Deprivation quintile¶ | 1 (most deprived)* |
| 2 | |
| 3 | |
| 4 | |
| 5 (least deprived) | |
| Ethnicity | Not a member of ethnic minority group* |
| Member of ethnic minority group** | |
| Marital status | Never married* |
| Married/civil partnership | |
| Separated/divorced | |
| Widowed/surviving partner | |
| Length of residence (approximate) | Time in city not known* |
| Possibly long-term resident†† |
*Denotes reference category.
†Social Grades ‘A’ and ‘B’ were combined into one single category because of the very small number of respondents in each city classed as Social Grade ‘A’.
‡No degree level qualifications but one of the following categories: O Grade, Standard Grade, O Level, Access 3 Cluster, Intermediate 1 or 2, GCSE, CSE, Senior Certificate or equivalent; SCE Higher Grade, Higher, Advanced Higher, CSYS, A level, AS Level, Advanced Senior Certificate or equivalent; GNVQ/GSVQ Foundation or Intermediate, NVQ/SVQ Level 1 or 2, SCOTVEC Module, City and Guilds Craft or equivalent; GNVQ/GSVQ Advanced, NVQ/SVQ Level 3, ONC, OND, SCOTVEC National Diploma, City and Guilds Advanced Craft or equivalent; HNC, HND, NVQ/SVQ level 4 or equivalent; Professional qualifications; Other school qualifications not already mentioned (including foreign qualifications); Other postschool but preHigher Education qualifications not already mentioned (including foreign qualifications); Other Higher Education qualifications not already mentioned (including foreign qualifications); Other vocational/work-related qualifications.
§Full list on questionnaire: First Degree, Postgraduate qualifications, Masters, PhD, NVQ/SVQ Level 5 or equivalent.
¶Based on ‘income deprivation’ in 2005, the measure in previous analyses of deprivation and mortality in Glasgow, Liverpool and Manchester.2
**Includes the following categories: White and Black Caribbean; White and Black African; White and Asian; Any other mixed or multiple ethnic groups ; Indian; Pakistani; Bangladeshi; Chinese; Any other Asian background; African; Caribbean; Black; Any other Black/African/Caribbean background; Arab; Any other ethnic group.
††In analysing the data it seemed important to distinguish the views of those who had been resident in their city for a long time and those who had not. However, no specific question on length of residence in the city was included in the survey. Thus, a crude measure of likely length of residence was derived from other available information: respondents were asked how long they had lived in their neighbourhood (with options ranging from ‘under six months’ to ‘over five years’), and those who lived through the 1980s (ie, were aged at least 36 at the time of the survey) were additionally asked in which city they were resident for most of that decade. From those two questions, respondents were categorised as being ‘Possibly long-term resident’ (based on either being resident in their neighbourhood for 5 years or more, or having been in the same city in the 1980s) or ‘length of residence in city unknown’.
FT, full time; NVQ/SVQ, National Vocational Qualifications Scottish Vocational Qualifications; PT, part time.
Multivariate linear regression analysis of the factors associated with Sense of Coherence (SOC-13) score
| Variable/category | N (weighted) | Adjusted mean* | Δμ† (95% CI) | Significance, p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| City | ||||
| Glasgow‡ | 1288 | 65.12 | ||
| Liverpool | 1193 | 60.07 | −5.05 (−6.04 to −4.07) | <0.001 |
| Manchester | 1216 | 56.98 | −8.14 (−9.12 to −7.16) | <0.001 |
| Deprivation quintile | ||||
| 1 (most deprived)‡ | 668 | 65.12 | ||
| 2 | 716 | 65.83 | 0.71 (−0.60 to 2.02) | 0.289 |
| 3 | 723 | 66.37 | 1.25 (−0.07 to 2.57) | 0.064 |
| 4 | 802 | 67.59 | 2.47 (1.16 to 3.78) | <0.001 |
| 5 (least deprived) | 788 | 67.71 | 2.59 (1.26 to 3.93) | <0.001 |
| Educational attainment | ||||
| No qualifications‡ | 1148 | 65.12 | ||
| Some qualifications, but not degree level | 2019 | 67.81 | 2.69 (1.67 to 3.71) | <0.001 |
| 1st degree and above (includes NVQ/SVQ level 5 or equivalent) | 531 | 69.57 | 4.45 (3.00 to 5.90) | <0.001 |
| Employment status | ||||
| Employed (PT and FT)‡ | 1428 | 65.12 | ||
| Unemployed | 442 | 58.33 | −6.79 (−8.17 to −5.40) | <0.001 |
| Ill/disabled | 245 | 54.26 | −10.86 (−12.62 to −9.10) | <0.001 |
| Retired | 698 | 66.47 | 1.35 (−0.43 to 3.13) | 0.136 |
| Looking after home/family | 351 | 64.06 | −1.06 (−2.55 to 0.43) | 0.162 |
| In education/training (PT/FT) | 509 | 65.22 | 0.10 (−1.35 to 1.55) | 0.892 |
| Marital status | ||||
| Never married‡ | 1671 | 65.12 | ||
| Married/civil partnership | 1416 | 67.36 | 2.24 (1.13 to 3.35) | <0.001 |
| Separated/divorced | 339 | 65.48 | 0.36 (−1.26 to 1.98) | 0.662 |
| Widowed/surviving partner | 271 | 65.58 | 0.46 (−1.57 to 2.49) | 0.658 |
| Age group | ||||
| 16–29‡ | 1255 | 65.12 | ||
| 30–44 | 908 | 63.65 | −1.47 (−2.70 to −0.24) | 0.019 |
| 45–64 | 958 | 64.07 | −1.05 (−2.43 to 0.33) | 0.137 |
| 65+ | 569 | 65.99 | 0.87 (−1.30 to 3.05) | 0.432 |
R2=0.18; adjusted R2=0.18.
*Mean predicted by full fitted model.
†Difference in mean compared to reference category after adjustment for other factors in the model.
‡Reference category of variable.
FT, full time; NVQ/SVQ, National Vocational Qualifications Scottish Vocational Qualifications; PT, part time.
Multivariate logistic regression analysis: ORs for residents of Liverpool and Manchester, compared to those of Glasgow, for reporting bad or very bad health, after adjustment for (1) characteristics of the samples and (2) Sense of Coherence (SOC-13) score
| Model | City | Percentage of sample* | OR (fully adjusted; 95% CI) | Sig†, p value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 Adjusting for age, gender, social grade, employment status, educational attainment, deprivation quintile, ethnicity, marital status, length of residence in city | ||||
| Glasgow‡ | 9.6 | |||
| Liverpool | 8.5 | 0.74 (0.54 to 1.02) | 0.065 | |
| Manchester | 5.9 | 0.67 (0.48 to 0.94) | 0.022 | |
| 2 Adjusting for the above, plus Sense of Coherence (SoC-13)† | ||||
| Glasgow‡ | 9.6 | |||
| Liverpool | 8.5 | 0.67 (0.48 to 0.93) | 0.016 | |
| Manchester | 5.9 | 0.53 (0.38 to 0.76) | <0.001 | |
R2 values (Cox & Snell)—model 1: 0.14; model 2: 0.15.
Only significant (p<0.05) variables included in final models.
*Weighted figures.
†Sense of Coherence—OR 0.97 (95% CIs 0.96 to 0.98, p<0.0001).
‡Reference category of variable.