| Literature DB >> 29236719 |
Vânia Rocha1, Ana Isabel Ribeiro1, Milton Severo1,2, Henrique Barros1,2, Sílvia Fraga1,2.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To assess the relationship between socioeconomic deprivation and health-related quality of life in urban neighbourhoods, using a multilevel approach.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29236719 PMCID: PMC5728480 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0188736
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Participants’ characteristics according to the neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation class.
| Total | Class 1 | Class 2 | Class 3 | Pearson chi-square statistic | Degrees of freedom | p-value | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 35.35 | 4 | ||||||
| 18–34 years | 78 | 42 (11.6) | 29 (4.7) | 7 (4.1) | |||
| 35–64 years | 818 | 267 (74.0) | 427 (68.5) | 124 (72.9) | |||
| 65 or more years | 258 | 52 (14.4) | 167 (26.8) | 39 (22.9) | |||
| 1.31 | 2 | 0.519 | |||||
| Female | 699 | 210 (58.2) | 383 (61.5) | 106 (62.4) | |||
| Male | 455 | 151 (41.8) | 240 (38.5) | 64 (37.6) | |||
| 155.07 | 4 | ||||||
| 4 years or less | 401 | 58 (16.1) | 234 (37.6) | 109 (64.1) | |||
| 5 to 11 years | 384 | 122 (33.8) | 212 (34.0) | 50 (29.4) | |||
| 12 or more years | 369 | 181 (50.1) | 177 (28.4) | 11 (6.5) | |||
| 12.95 | 2 | ||||||
| Smoker | 263 | 105 (29.1) | 119 (19.1) | 39 (22.9) | |||
| Non-smoker | 891 | 256 (70.9) | 504 (80.9) | 131 (77.1) | |||
| 3.19 | 2 | 0.203 | |||||
| No | 866 | 283 (78.4) | 459 (73.7) | 124 (72.9) | |||
| Yes | 288 | 78 (21.6) | 164 (26.3) | 46 (27.1) | |||
| 7.11 | 2 | ||||||
| No | 803 | 248 (68.7) | 450 (72.2) | 105 (61.8) | |||
| Yes | 351 | 113 (31.3) | 173 (27.8) | 65 (38.2) | |||
| 17.68 | 4 | ||||||
| No | 443 | 165 (45.7) | 217 (34.8) | 61 (35.9) | |||
| Yes | 710 | 196 (54.3) | 406 (65.2) | 108 (63.5) |
Legend
1Alcohol intake >15g/day for women and >30g/day for men.
2 Women and men were considered sedentary if they scored below 237 and 270 METs.min/day, respectively.
In bold statistically significant p-values.
Participants’ health-related quality of life according to neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation classes.
| n = 1154 (mean ±SD) | Class 1 | Class 2 | Class 3 | F statistic (One-way Anova) | Degrees of freedom | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 51.5±9.25 | 47.8±9.65 | 44.6±11.27 | ||||
| Physical functioning | 79.3±20.07 | 71.7±23.19 | 63.9±26.59 | 28.12 | 2 | |
| Role physical | 79.0±28.31 | 70.0±31.94 | 64.6±34.53 | 15.04 | 2 | |
| Bodily pain | 68.3±24.83 | 62.1±25.89 | 54.9±28.48 | 16.17 | 2 | |
| General health perceptions | 61.5±19.25 | 55.5±19.54 | 52.7±21.18 | 15.19 | 2 | |
| 49.9±10.25 | 49.4±10.57 | 49.9±10.04 | 0.745 | |||
| Vitality | 58.7±20.30 | 55.5±21.96 | 52.8±22.88 | 4.89 | 2 | |
| Social Functioning | 76.2±23.19 | 73.8±25.05 | 72.9±25.07 | 1.47 | 2 | 0.230 |
| Role emotional | 78.3±27.68 | 70.7±32.29 | 66.7±33.81 | 10.14 | 2 | |
| General mental health | 66.4±21.78 | 64.0±23.50 | 62.3±24.01 | 2.20 | 2 | 0.111 |
Legend: SD: standard deviation.
In bold statistically significant p-values.
Neighbourhood clustering and contextual effects of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation on physical health-related quality of life.
| PHYSICAL HEALTH | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -0.66 (-1.83;0.51) | -0.60 (-1.76;0.56) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | ||||
| Variance | 5.0 | 1.41 | 1.75 | 0.10 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 71.8 | 99.9 | 98.0 | |
| ICC (%) | 5.0 | 1.5 | 2.4 | 0.1 | |
| Residual (SD) | 9.7 | 8.6 | 8.5 | 8.5 | |
| PHYSICAL FUNCTIONING | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -0.89 (-3.65;1.87) | -0.84 (-3.59;1.91) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | ||||
| | |||||
| Variance | 8.87 | 6.16 | 5.51 | 5.61 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 99.9 | 99.9 | 99.9 | |
| ICC (%) | 1.6 | 1.2 | 1.3 | 1.4 | |
| Residual (SD) | 23.2 | 22.8 | 20.3 | 20.2 | |
| ROLE PHYSICAL | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -1.65 (-5.63;2.33) | -1.47 (-5.48;2.54) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -3.20 (-8.96;2.57) | -2.90 (-8.70;2.89) | ||
| | |||||
| Variance | 23.05 | 5.89 | 3.22 | 6.76 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 74.5 | 86.0 | 70.7 | |
| ICC (%) | 2.3 | 0.6 | 0.4 | 0.8 | |
| Residual (SD) | 31.3 | 29.0 | 28.9 | 25.7 | |
| BODILY PAIN | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -0.64 (-3.98;2.70) | -0.45 (-3.81;2.91) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -3.96 (-8.79;0.86) | -3.60 (-8.44;1.24) | ||
| | |||||
| Variance | 31.18 | 18.45 | 13.16 | 18.62 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 40.8 | 57.8 | 40.3 | |
| ICC (%) | 4.5 | 2.7 | 2.4 | 3.4 | |
| Residual (SD) | 25.6 | 23.3 | 23.0 | 19.6 | |
| GENERAL HEALTH PERCEPTIONS | |||||
| | —- | ||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -1.76 (-4.33;0.82) | -1.64 (-4.18;0.89) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -2.60 (-6.32;1.12) | -2.18 (-5.85;1.48) | ||
| | |||||
| Variance | 12.33 | 6.35 | 2.92 | 4.44 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 48.5 | 76.3 | 63.9 | |
| ICC (%) | 3.1 | 1.6 | 0.8 | 1.3 | |
| Residual (SD) | 19.6 | 19.5 | 18.5 | 18.0 | |
Legend: ICC, intraclass correlation coefficient. B = beta regression coefficients; SD: standard deviation; 95% CI: 95% confidence intervals
* Model 1: neighbourhood random effect only; Model 2: Model 1 plus fixed effects of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation class; Model 3: Model 2 plus age, gender and education; Model 4: Model 3 plus smoking, alcohol consumption, sedentariness and chronic diseases
ˠ Proportion of explained variance (%): corresponds to the proportion of between-neighbourhood variance that could be explained by measured neighbourhood variables, and individual-level confounders compared to Model 1, calculated as [1-(variance of the model/ variance of the reference model)]*100
Ref: Reference category. N = 1154.
Neighbourhood clustering and contextual effects of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation on mental health-related quality of life.
| MENTAL HEALTH | Model 1 | Model 2 | Model 3 | Model 4 | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -0.47(-1.82;0.88) | -0.14 (-1.52;1.23) | -0.18 (-1.55;1.20) | |
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -0.01(-1.92;1.89) | 0.89 (-1.11;2.88) | 1.00 (-0.99;2.99) | |
| Variance | 0.18 | 0.14 | 0.46 | 0.37 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 22.2 | 155.6 | 105.6 | |
| ICC (%) | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.5 | 0.4 | |
| Residual (SD) | 10.4 | 10.0 | 9.9 | 9.8 | |
| VITALITY | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | 0.15 (-2.68;2.99) | 0.12 (-2.69;2.94) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -0.12 (-4.22;3.97) | 0.17 (-3.90;4.23) | ||
| | |||||
| Variance | 14.02 | 11.30 | 7.31 | 7.57 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 19.4 | 47.8 | 46.0 | |
| ICC (%) | 3.0 | 2.4 | 1.8 | 1.9 | |
| Residual (SD) | 21.3 | 21.3 | 20.0 | 19.8 | |
| SOCIAL FUNCTIONING | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -2.38 (-5.56;0.80) | -0.29 (-3.52;2.95) | -0.35 (-3.57;2.87) | |
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -3.31 (-7.78;1.16) | 0.47 (-4.21;5.15) | 0.72 (-3.94;5.38) | |
| | |||||
| Variance | 8.60 | 9.14 | 0.21 | 0.34 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 6.28 | 2.4 | 3.9 | |
| ICC (%) | 1.4 | 1.5 | 0.03 | 0.06 | |
| Residual (SD) | 24.5 | 24.5 | 23.7 | 23.6 | |
| ROLE EMOTIONAL | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -3.11 (-7.18;0.97) | -3.04 (-7.11;1.03) | ||
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -4.25 (-10.15;1.65) | -3.94 (-9.83;1.95) | ||
| | |||||
| Variance | 9.66 | 1.27 | 1.52 | 1.44 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref | 86.9 | 84.3 | 85.1 | |
| ICC (%) | 9.8 | 1.3 | 1.7 | 1.6 | |
| Residual (SD) | 31.4 | 31.2 | 30.0 | 29.9 | |
| GENERAL MENTAL HEALTH | |||||
| | |||||
| Class 1 –least deprived | —- | Ref. | Ref. | Ref. | |
| Class 2 | —- | -2.42 (-5.48;0.63) | 0.23 (-2.82;3.28) | 0.21 (-2.80;3.22) | |
| Class 3 –most deprived | —- | -4.26 (-8.56;0.04) | 0.89 (-3.51;5.30) | 1.25 (-3.11;5.60) | |
| | |||||
| Variance | 5.63 | 5.67 | 7.30 | 6.75 | |
| Variance explained (%) | Ref. | 0.7 | 29.7 | 19.9 | |
| ICC (%) | 1.06 | 1.1 | 1.5 | 1.5 | |
| Residual (SD) | 23.0 | 22.9 | 21.6 | 21.4 | |
Legend: ICC, intraclass correlation coefficient. B = beta regression coefficients; SD: standard deviation; 95% CI: 95% confidence intervals.
* Model 1: neighbourhood random effect only; Model 2: Model 1 plus fixed effects of neighbourhood socioeconomic deprivation class; Model 3: Model 2 plus age, gender and education; Model 4: Model 3 plus smoking, alcohol consumption, sedentariness and chronic diseases.
ˠ Proportion of explained variance (%): corresponds to the proportion of between-neighbourhood variance that could be explained by measured neighbourhood variables, and individual-level confounders compared to Model 1, calculated as [1-(variance of the model/ variance of the reference model)]*100; Ref: Reference category. N = 1154.