| Literature DB >> 30140435 |
Julianne Williams1, Luke Allen1, Kremlin Wickramasinghe1, Bente Mikkelsen2, Nia Roberts3, Nick Townsend1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Non-communicable diseases (NCDs) are the leading cause of death globally. Eighty-two percent of premature NCD deaths occur within low- and lower middle-income countries (LLMICs). Research to date, largely drawn from high-income countries, suggests that disadvantaged and marginalized groups have a higher NCD burden, but there has been a dearth of research studying this relationship within LLMICs. The purpose of this systematic review is to map the literature on evidence from LLMICs on the socio-economic status (SES) gradient of four particular NCDs: cardiovascular disease, cancer, diabetes, and chronic respiratory diseases.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30140435 PMCID: PMC6076564 DOI: 10.7189/jogh.08.020409
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Glob Health ISSN: 2047-2978 Impact factor: 4.413
Medline search terms
| # | Searches |
|---|---|
| 1 | cardiovascular diseases/ or heart diseases/ or vascular diseases/ or cerebrovascular diseases/ |
| 2 | exp Myocardial Ischemia/ |
| 3 | Heart Failure/ |
| 4 | exp brain ischemia/ or exp stroke/ |
| 5 | exp Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/ |
| 6 | lung diseases, obstructive/ or exp pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive/ |
| 7 | exp *Neoplasms/ |
| 8 | ((cardiovascular or cardio-vascular) adj3 disease*).ti,ab. |
| 9 | ((cardiovascular or cardio-vascular) adj3 (event* or outcome* or risk*)).ti,ab. |
| 10 | ((coronary or heart or myocard*) adj3 disease*).ti,ab. |
| 11 | ((coronary or heart or myocard*) adj3 (event* or outcome* or risk*)).ti,ab. |
| 12 | ((ischaemic or ischemic or ischaemia or ischemia) adj3 disease*).ti,ab. |
| 13 | ((ischaemic or ischemic or ischaemia or ischemia) adj3 (event* or outcome* or risk*)).ti,ab. |
| 14 | myocardial infarct*.ti,ab. |
| 15 | ((cerebrovascular or vascular) adj3 disease*).ti,ab. |
| 16 | ((cerebrovascular or vascular) adj3 (event* or outcome* or risk*)).ti,ab. |
| 17 | stroke.ti,ab. |
| 18 | heart failure.ti,ab. |
| 19 | diabet*.ti. |
| 20 | ((type 2 or type ii or noninsulin dependent or non insulin dependent or adult onset or maturity onset or obes*) adj2 diabet*).ti,ab. |
| 21 | (niddm or t2dm or tiidm).ti,ab. |
| 22 | (chronic adj2 (lung or pulmonary)).ti,ab. |
| 23 | copd.ti,ab. |
| 24 | (neoplas* or cancer* or carcinoma* or tumor* or tumour* or malignan* or leukaemia or leukemia or lymphoma?).ti,ab. |
| 25 | 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 or 7 or 8 or 9 or 10 or 11 or 12 or 13 or 14 or 15 or 16 or 17 or 18 or 19 or 20 or 21 or 22 or 23 or 24 |
| 26 | exp Poverty/ |
| 27 | Socio-economic Factors/ |
| 28 | Income/ |
| 29 | Gross Domestic Product/ |
| 30 | Economic development/ |
| 31 | “Salaries and Fringe Benefits”/ |
| 32 | poverty.ti,ab. |
| 33 | ((socio-economic or socio-economic or economic) adj2 (factor? or inequalit* or indicator? or status or development)).ti,ab. |
| 34 | ((household? or house-hold? or family or families) adj3 (income or earning? or wage? or poor or wealth)).ti,ab. |
| 35 | (gross domestic product or gross national product or gdp or gnp).ti,ab. |
| 36 | (unemploy* or (employment adj2 (status or indicator? or level?))).ti,ab. |
| 37 | 26 or 27 or 28 or 29 or 30 or 31 or 32 or 33 or 34 or 35 or 36 |
| 38 | Developing Countries/ |
| 39 | (Afghanistan or Angola or Armenia or Armenian or Bangladesh or Benin or Bhutan or Bolivia or Burkina Faso or Burkina Fasso or Upper Volta or Burundi or Urundi or Cambodia or Khmer Republic or Kampuchea or Cameroon or Cameroons or Cameron or Camerons or Cape Verde or Central African Republic or Chad or Comoros or Comoro Islands or Comores or Mayotte or Congo or Zaire or Cote d'Ivoire or Ivory Coast or Djibouti or French Somaliland or East Timor or East Timur or Timor Leste or Egypt or United Arab Republic or El Salvador or Eritrea or Ethiopia or Gabon or Gabonese Republic or Gambia or Gaza or Georgia Republic or Georgian Republic or Ghana or Gold Coast or Guatemala or Guinea or Guinea-Bisau or Guam or Guiana or Guyana or Haiti or Honduras or India or Maldives or Indonesia or Kenya or Kiribati or (Democratic People* adj2 Korea) or Kosovo or Kyrgyzstan or Kirghizia or Kyrgyz Republic or Kirghiz or Kirgizstan or Lao PDR or Laos or Lesotho or Basutoland or Liberia or Madagascar or Malawi or Nyasaland or Mali or Mauritania or Micronesia or Moldova or Moldovia or Moldovian or Mongolia or Morocco or Ifni or Mozambique or Myanmar or Myanma or Burma or Nepal or Netherlands Antilles or Nicaragua or Niger or Nigeria or Pakistan or Palestine or Papua New Guinea or Paraguay or Philippines or Philipines or Phillipines or Phillippines or Rwanda or Ruanda or Samoa or Samoan Islands or Navigator Island or Navigator Islands or Sao Tome or Senegal or Sierra Leone or Sri Lanka or Ceylon or Solomon Islands or Somalia or Sudan or Swaziland or Syria or Principe or South Sudan or Tajikistan or Tadzhikistan or Tadjikistan or Tadzhik or Tanzania or Timor-Leste or Togo or Togolese Republic or Uganda or Ukraine or Uzbekistan or Uzbek or Vanuatu or New Hebrides or Vietnam or Viet Nam or West Bank or Yemen or Zambia or Zimbabwe or Rhodesia).hw,kf,ti,ab,cp. |
| 40 | ((developing or less* developed or under developed or underdeveloped or low* middle income or low* income or underserved or under served or deprived or poor*) adj (countr* or nation? or state? or population? or world)).ti,ab. |
| 41 | ((developing or less* developed or under developed or underdeveloped or low* middle income or low* income) adj (economy or economies)).ti,ab. |
| 42 | (low* adj (gdp or gnp or gross domestic or gross national)).ti,ab. |
| 43 | (lmic or lami).ti,ab. |
| 44 | transitional countr*.ti,ab. |
| 45 | 38 or 39 or 40 or 41 or 42 or 43 or 44 |
| 46 | exp Mortality/ |
| 47 | Morbidity/ |
| 48 | Survival Rate/ |
| 49 | (mortality or survival or death?).ti,ab. |
| 50 | morbidit*.ti,ab. |
| 51 | 46 or 47 or 48 or 49 or 50 |
| 52 | 25 and 37 and 45 and 51 |
| 53 | cardiovascular diseases/mo or heart diseases/mo or vascular diseases/mo or cerebrovascular diseases/mo or exp Myocardial Ischemia/mo or Heart Failure/mo or exp brain ischemia/mo or exp stroke/mo or exp Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2/mo or lung diseases, obstructive/mo or exp pulmonary disease, chronic obstructive/mo or exp *Neoplasms/mo |
| 54 | 53 and 37 and 45 |
| 55 | 52 or 54 |
Population, exposure, comparator and outcome for the systematic review
| Population | Exposure | Comparator | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| General populations (different income levels) from low- and lower middle-income countries [ | Socio-economic status, measured according to income, access to basic needs (eg, housing), human capabilities (eg, literacy), household possessions/wealth or other measures. | We compared outcomes among populations from one socio-economic level to those in another | Morbidity or mortality (including premature mortality) from NCDs from: |
| In the initial screening, we did not restrict studies based on the type of SES or poverty indicator that the paper used. | Where possible, we focused on outcomes among the lowest SES groups and by sex | 1) Cardiovascular diseases (coronary heart diseases and strokes) | |
| 2) Cancer | |||
| 3) Diabetes (type II) | |||
| 4) Chronic respiratory diseases |
Figure 1Summary of search information.
Figure 2Map of low- and lower middle-income countries represented by research papers in this review.
Figure 3Number of studies by year of publication.
Figure 4Summary of reported associations between socio-economic status (SES) and non-communicable diseases (NCD) outcomes.
Included studies with cancer outcomes, by region
| Study | Country | Design | n | Quality | Sample | Exposure | Outcome | Highest Risk Group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jordan et al (2013) [ | Tanzania | Case-control | 345 | Medium | 115 cases and 230 age- and district-matched controls | Property Index | Breast cancer | Higher property level* (A) |
| Misganaw et al (2013) [ | Ethiopia | Cross-sectional | 3,709 | Medium | Malignancy mortality data for 3709 adults (15 and older) who died in Addis Ababa between 2006 and 2009 (identified via burial surveillance) and whose families could be interviewed to determine cause of death | Education | Malignant neoplasm mortality | Higher education† (A) |
| Parkin et al (2000) [ | Uganda | Case-control | 194 | High | Cases included 50 adults and 132 children with histologically diagnosed lymphoma. Controls were adults with cancers unrelated to HIV and children with non-infectious diseases | Education | non-Hodgkin lymphoma | Higher education |
| Aziz et al (2008) [ | Pakistan | Cohort | 525 | Medium | 525 patients with stage I-III breast cancer presenting to the Department of Oncology from January 1997 to December 2005 | SES | Event free survival in stage I-III breast cancer | Lower SES‡ (A) |
| Overall survival in stage I-III breast cancer (n = 525) | Lower SES† (A) | |||||||
| Aziz et al (2010) [ | Pakistan | Cohort | 237 | High | 237 women undergoing multimodality treatment for locally advanced breast cancer (LABC) treated between Jan 200 and December 2005 at Jinnah Hospital Pakistan) | SES | Event-free survival in locally advanced breast cancer | Lower SES* (A) |
| Overall survival in locally advanced breast cancer | Lower SES | |||||||
| Aziz et al. (2004) [ | Pakistan | Cohort | 286 | High | 286 patients with breast cancer recruited between 1996 and 1998 | SES | Breast cancer | |
| Size of tumour (71) | Low SES† | |||||||
| Stage at diagnosis (I) | Low SES† | |||||||
| Mean number of lymph nodes positive | Low SES | |||||||
| Mean time elapsed before diagnosis (months) | Low SES† | |||||||
| Mean age at diagnosis (years) | Low SES† | |||||||
| Five year disease free survival | Low SES‡ | |||||||
| Five year overall survival | Low SES† | |||||||
| Chaouki et al (1998) [ | Morocco | Case-control | 460 | High | 245 cases and 215 controls from Rabat Morocco. Cases of invasive cervical cancer identified among first attendants at hospital. Cases were verified histologically. Controls identified at same hospital and in a nearby general hospital | Education | Cervical cancer | Lower education‡ |
| Wealth (facilities at home) | Fewer facilities at home‡ | |||||||
| Income | Lower family income‡ | |||||||
| Khan et al (2015) [ | Pakistan | Cross-sectional | 315 | Low | 315 female patients from Oncology Institute in Islamabad | Education | Breast cancer presentation delay | Lower education * |
| SES | Lower SES* | |||||||
| Bonilla et al (2010) [ | El Salvador | Cohort | 886 | High | 433 de novo acute lymphoblastic leukaemia patients 0-16 y of age, diagnosed between 2000 and 2007 | Education (parent) | Event free survival (standard risk patients) | Lower education (parent)† (A) |
| Income | Event free survival (High risk patients) | Lower monthly income* (A) | ||||||
| Education (parent) | Event free survival (standard risk patients) | Lower education (parent) (A) | ||||||
| Income | Event free survival (High risk patients) | Lower monthly income (A) | ||||||
| Gavidia et al (2012) [ | El Salvador | Cohort | 251 | High | 251 children aged 0-16 y with newly diagnosed acute leukaemia treated at Benjamin Bloom hospital, San Salvador | Mother's education | Leukaemia patient outcome: Sepsis | Mother illiterate* (A) |
| Father's education | Father literate (A) | |||||||
| Income | Annual Household Income<US$ 2000 (A) | |||||||
| Household Characteristics | Clean water at home (A) | |||||||
| Household Characteristics | No toilet at home (A) | |||||||
| Mother's education | Leukaemia patient outcome: Infectious death | Mother illiterate (A) | ||||||
| Father's education | Father illiterate (A) | |||||||
| Income | Annual Household Income<$2000* (A) | |||||||
| Household Characteristics | No clean water at home (A) | |||||||
| Household Characteristics | No toilet at home (A) | |||||||
| Gupta et al (2012) [ | El Salvador, Honduras, Guatemala | Cohort | 279 | High | 279 patients younger than 21 y diagnosed with AML from 2000 to 2008 in El Salvador, Honduras or Guatemala | Monthly purchasing power units | Leukaemia: treatment-related mortality | Higher Purchasing Power (A) |
| Education (parent) | Higher education (A) | |||||||
| Ali et al (2008) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 522 | Medium | Breast cancer patients from Kerala or Tamil Nadu visiting a regional cancer centre | SES | Late stage diagnosis of breast cancer (stages III and IV) | Lower SES (A) |
| Education (parent) | Illiterate* (A) | |||||||
| Burkart et al (2011) [ | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 21,551 | Medium | Mortality data (n = 21 551) from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics for period from 2002 to 2007, using a sample comprised of 1000 primary sample units in rural and urban areas. Deaths recorded by officials quarterly and then verified through field visits | SES (of region) | Deaths attributable to cancer | High SES region |
| Chankapa et al (2011) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 968 | Medium | 968 adult women aged 15-60 y | Education | Cervical cancer: Low-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion | Illiterate |
| Monthly family income | Cervical cancer: High-grade squamous intraepithelial lesion | Lower income | ||||||
| Dutta et al (2005) [ | India | Cohort | 121 | Medium | Between 1994 and 2001, 121 patients diagnosed with gallbladder cancer were evaluated prospectively in the gastroenterology services of two hospitals | SES | Age of diagnosis for gallbladder cancer | Low SES* (A) |
| Gajalakshmi et al (1997) [ | India | Cohort | 1747 | High | 1747 patients registered at population based cancer registry (part of national network) (inclusion criteria: follow up data available) | Education | Five year breast cancer survival (% by education level) | Illiterate* (A) |
| Mostert et al (2012) [ | Indonesia | Cohort | 143 | High | 145 patients diagnosed with a malignancy at academic hospital (Inclusion criteria required age to be between 0-16 y with newly diagnosed malignancy | Hospital class, insurance status | Childhood cancer (Abandonment of treatment) | Poor† |
| Childhood cancer (Event-free survival) | Poor† | |||||||
| Patil et al (2014) [ | India | Case-control | 380 | High | 141 cases of patients with hepatocellular carcinoma and 240 controls with chronic liver disease (age 18-70), seeking treatment at two centres in Mumbai | Income | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Higher income* |
| Sankaranarayanan et al (1995) [ | India | Cohort | 452 | High | Cervical cancer cases (age 35-65) registered from 1 January to 31 December | SES | 5 y survival from cervical cancer | Low SES* (A) |
| Ngaon et al (2001) [ | Vietnam | Cross-sectional | 5034 | Medium | 5034 patients with cervical cancer treated in the Central Oncology of Ho Chi Minh City from Nov. 1989-Nov 1994 | Education | Cervical cancer | Illiterate* |
| Lan et al (2013) [ | Vietnam | Cohort | 948 | High | 5034 patients with cervical cancer treated in the Central Oncology of Ho Chi Minh City from Nov. 1989-Nov 1994 | Education | Survival probability following diagnosis of breast cancer | Lower education* (A) |
| Survival probability following diagnosis of breast cancer (Extended Cox model assessing effect) | Lower education* (A) | |||||||
| Xin et al (2014) [ | Mongolia | Cross-sectional | 643 | Medium | 643 deaths | Education | Years of life lost (YLL) due to colorectal cancer and average years of life lost (AYLL) due to colorectal cancer in each region | Higher education† |
A – adjusted, y – years, SES – socio-economic status
*<0.05.
†<0.01.
‡<0.001.
Included studies with cardiovascular disease outcomes, by region
| Study | Country | Design | n | Quality | Sample | Exposure | Outcome | Highest risk group | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Miszkurka et al (2012) [ | Burkina Faso | Cross-sectional | ,822 | Medium | 4822 adults over the age of 18 (47% male) sampled through a multi-stage stratified random cluster sampling strategy by gender, age, rural/urban setting) | Education | Angina (prevalence) | Some education (A) | |
| Income | Higher income* (A) | ||||||||
| Engels et al (2014) [ | Morocco | Cross-sectional | 44 742 | Medium | Data from 13 279 households (60 031 individuals) collected via door-to-door survey. Sampled population demographically and socio-economically representative of Morocco | Wealth | Stroke prevalence (overall) | Lower wealth (A) | |
| Wealth | Stroke prevalence (rural) | Medium-levels of wealth (A) | |||||||
| Wealth | Stroke prevalence (urban) | Lower wealth* (A) | |||||||
| Burkart et al (2011) [ | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 21 551 | Medium | Mortality data from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics for period from 2002 to 2007 in rural and urban areas. Deaths recorded by officials quarterly and then verified through field visits | SES (of region) | Deaths attributable to CVD | High SES region† | |
| Chandrashekhar et al (2014) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 370 | Low | 370 persons age 60 and older in urban and rural field practice area of Department of Community medicine in Gulbarga | Education | CVD | Some education† | |
| Class | CVD | Middle class | |||||||
| Das et al (2007) [ | India | Cohort | 51 533 | High | 52377 adults living in Kolkata, selected via stratified random sampling | Slum vs non-slum | Stroke prevalence | Residents of slum areas | |
| Stroke incidence | Residents of slum areas | ||||||||
| Stroke (case fatality rate) | Residents of non-slum areas | ||||||||
| Dogra et al (2012) [ | India | Case-control | 442 | Medium | 442 participants (184 cases (≤40 y) with definite AMI (as per WHO criteria) and 350 (≤40 y) controls) | SES | AMI | Low SES† (A) | |
| Kisjanto et al (2005) [ | Indonesia | Case-control | 917 | Low | 235 cases and 682 age-matched controls of women (aged 20-44 y) from 14 hospitals in Jakarta, recruited between 1989 and 1993 | Social class | Stroke | Higher class (A) | |
| Education | Stroke | Higher education* (A) | |||||||
| Singh et al (1997) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 1764 | High | Adults living in randomly selected villages who had lived in the area since birth | SES | CAD (males) (Crude) | High SES† | |
| SES | CAD (females) (Crude) | High SES* | |||||||
| SES | CAD (males) | High SES (A) | |||||||
| SES | CAD (females) | High SES (A) | |||||||
| Xavier et al (2008) [ | India | Cohort | 18 862 | High | 12 405 patients given a definitive diagnosis of electrocardiograph changes or suspected MI who were readmitted 30 d later | Class | Odds of mortality after 30 d following acute coronary symptoms (CRUDE) | Poor* (A) | |
| Class | Odds of mortality after 30 d following acute coronary symptoms (Adjusted) | Poor (A) | |||||||
| Yadav Ret al (2013) [ | India | Cohort | 599 | High | 599 stroke registry patients from urban and rural population admitted to the neurology department at a tertiary care centre in North India | Job status | Stroke morbidity | Lower occupation category (A) | |
| Gupta et al (1994) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 3148 | High | 3148 residents aged over 20 (1982 men, 1166 women) divided into various groups according to years of formal schooling. Randomly selected from a cluster of three villages in rural India | Education | CHD (men) | Lower education (men) | |
| Education | CHD (women) | Lower education (women)† | |||||||
| Pednekar et al (2011) [ | India | Cohort | 148 173 | High | 148 173 individuals aged ≥35 y were recruited in Mumbai during 1991-1997 and followed to ascertain vital status during 1997-2003 | Education | CVD mortality (men) | Less education (A) | |
| Education | CVD mortality (women) | Some education (A) | |||||||
| Rao et al (2011) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 2129 | Medium | Sample of adults with CVD (n = 2129) and diabetes (439) drawn from 47 302 rural and 26 566 urban households | Education | CVD (self-reported, including hypertension) | Lower education* | |
| Rastogi et al (2011) [ | India | Case-control | 1050 | High | 350 cases and 700 controls, recruited equally from New Delhi and Bangalore. The subjects’ mean (SD) age was 52 (11) years, and 12% of the subjects were women | Education | AMI (relative risk) | Lower education* (A) | |
| Income | AMI (relative risk) | Lower income* (A) | |||||||
| Pais et al (1996) [ | India | Case-control | 400 | High | 200 Indian patients with a first acute myocardial infarction (AMI) and 200 age and sex matched controls aged 30-60years | Income | AMI (Odds if low income) | Low income* (A) | |
| Singh et al (2005) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 2222 | Medium | 2842 randomly selected adults (25-64) who died between July 1999 to July 2001 in Moradabad, India | Social Class 1 (More Affluent) | Circulatory diseases (mortality)(males) | Higher social class* | |
| Sharieff et al (2003) [ | Pakistan | Cohort | 35 | Medium | 35 patients with heart failure in the last month of pregnancy or 5 mo postpartum | SES | Peripartum cardiomyopathy: Recovery or deterioration after 6 mo | Lower SES* | |
| Hoang et al (2006) [ | Vietnam | Cohort | 1067 | High | 1067 adults (≥20 y) living in a predominantly rural area died of all causes from 1999-2003 | Education | CVD mortality | Less education* (A) | |
| SES | CVD mortality | Non-poor (A) | |||||||
| Minh et al (2003) [ | Vietnam | Cohort | 64 | High | 249 deaths (64 related to CVD) registered in Bavi District, a population of approximately 50000 in a rural area 60 km to the west of Hanoi | Education | CVD mortality | Inconclusive (A) | |
| Economic condition | CVD mortality | ||||||||
| Enkh-Oyun et al (2013) [ | Mongolia | Cross-sectional | 2280 | Medium | 2280 people aged over 40 y from eight rural slums (counties villages) using WHO STEPs surveillance manual | Education | Ischemic heart disease (IHD) prevalence (overall) | Lower education (overall) (A) | |
| Education | IHD prevalence (men) | Some education (men) (A) | |||||||
| Education | IHD prevalence (women) | Lower education (women)† (A) | |||||||
SES – socio-economic status, IHD – ischemic heart disease, CVD – cardiovascular disease, AMI – acute myocardial infarction, CAD – coronary artery disease, A – Adjusted, y – years, mo – months, d – days
*<0.05.
†<0.01.
‡<0.001.
Included studies with diabetes outcomes, by region
| Study | Country | Design | n | Quality | Sample | Exposure | Outcome | Highest risk group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bella et al (1992) [ | Nigeria | Case-control | 57 | Medium | Insulin-dependent ketosis prone diabetics seen over a period of six years at University College hospital | Social class | Diabetes | Lower social class† |
| Education | Lower education† | |||||||
| Employment status | Non-skilled† | |||||||
| Fekadu et al (2010) [ | Ethiopia | Case-control | 217 | Medium | 107 cases and 110 controls from two regions recruited from diabetic clinics. Age and sex controls were recruited from general medical clinics for conditions other than diabetes in both communities | Occupation | Diabetes | Unskilled worker† (A) |
| Education | Lower education† (A) | |||||||
| Presence of animals | Animals sleeping in same room (A) | |||||||
| Access to toilet | No access to toilet† (A) | |||||||
| Access to water | No access to piped/clean water† (A) | |||||||
| Hatched (vs corrugated) roof | Hatched Roof (A) | |||||||
| No. of people/house | More people in the house (A) | |||||||
| No. of people/room | More people sleeping in one room* (A) | |||||||
| Distance from clinic, km | Greater Distance From Clinic† (A) | |||||||
| Possessions index | More Possessions† (A) | |||||||
| Ploubidis et al (2013) [ | Kenya | Cross-sectional | 4314 | High | 4314 participants ≥50 y of age | Wealth | Diabetes (type not specified) | Wealthier* (A) (Rural) |
| Wealth | Wealthier* (A) (Urban) | |||||||
| Safraj et al (2012) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 78 173 | Medium | 78 173 rural adults 35 and above | SES | Diabetes (type not specified), SR | Higher SES* (higher prevalence among SES Group 4 in all groups) (A) |
| Reddy et al (2007) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 31 866 | Medium | 19 973 individuals 20-69 y of age | Education | Diabetes (type not specified) | Some education (A) (Men) |
| Lower Education† (A) (Women) | ||||||||
| Corsi et al (2008) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 2439 | Medium | 168 135 survey respondents aged 18–49 y (women) and 18–54 y (men) | Caste | Diabetes (self-report) | Scheduled caste (A) |
| Wealth | Richest* (A) | |||||||
| Education | Some education | |||||||
| Sayeed et al (1997) [ | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 2362 | High | 1052 subjects from urban and 1319 from rural communities (age ≥20 y) of different socio-economic classes were investigated | Wealth | Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus | Richest* (A) |
| Gupta et al (2003) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 1123 | High | 1123 adults (>20 y living in urban India) | Education | Diabetes (self-report) | Some education (men) |
| Some education (women) | ||||||||
| Ajay et al (2008) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 10 930 | High | 10 930 urban adults (age 20-69) | Education | Diabetes (diagnosed according to fasting glucose) | Lower education‡ (A) |
| Kinra et al (2010) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 1983 | Medium | 1983 adults (aged 20-69 y) living in rural areas from 18 states in India | SES | Diabetes (based on self-report and blood glucose) | High SES† (A) (Men) |
| Middle and high SES (A) (women) | ||||||||
| Samuel et al (2012) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 228 | High | 2218 adults (age 26-32) from urban and rural setting involved in a cohort study (birth years: 1969-73) | SES | Diabetes (blood glucose diagnosis) | Highest SES† ((A)) (male, urban) |
| Middle SES ((a)) (female, urban) | ||||||||
| Highest SES‡ (a) (male, rural) | ||||||||
| Highest SES‡ (a) (female, rural) | ||||||||
| Education | Highest education (a) (male, urban) | |||||||
| Highest education (a) (female, urban) | ||||||||
| Highest education (a) (male, rural) | ||||||||
| Highest education (a) (female, rural) | ||||||||
| Zaman et al (2012) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 4535 | High | 4535 adults (aged 30+) recruited from rural Andhra Pradesh (mean age 49.4, SD 13.6) | Education | Diabetes (type not specified) | Educated† (A) (Male) |
| Educated (A) (Female) | ||||||||
| Occupation | Skilled‡ (A) (Male) | |||||||
| Skilled (A) (Female) | ||||||||
| Income | High (A) (Male) | |||||||
| High† (A) (Female) | ||||||||
| Rao et al (2011) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 2129 | Medium | Sample of adults with CVD (n = 2129) and diabetes (439) drawn from 47 302 rural and 26 566 urban households | Education | Diabetes (self-reported) | Lower education* |
SD – standard deviation, CVD – cardiovascular disease, SES – socio-economic status, A – adjusted
*<0.05.
†<0.01.
‡<0.001.
Included studies with chronic respiratory disease outcomes, by region
| Study | Country | Design | n | Quality | Sample | Exposure | Outcome | Highest risk group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Burkart et al (2011) [ | Bangladesh | Cross-sectional | 21 551 | Medium | Mortality data (n = 21 551) from the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics for period from 2002 to 2007, using a sample comprised of 1000 PUSs in rural and urban areas. Deaths recorded by officials quarterly and then verified through field visits. | SES (of region) | Deaths attributable to Respiratory disease (%) | High SES |
| Chhabra et al (2001) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 4171 | Medium | Permanent residents of Delhi who were 18+ years of age and living near one of nine permanent air quality-monitoring stations. | SES | COPD/chronic bronchitis | Lower SES (in both higher and lower pollution zones) |
| Chandrashekhar et al (2014) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 370 | Low | 370 persons age 60 and older in urban and rural field practice area of Department of Community medicine in Gulbarga. | Education | Respiratory disease | Some education |
| SES | Middle/lower class |
COPD – chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, SES – socio-economic status
Included studies with multiple non-communicable disease outcomes, by region
| Study | Country | Design | n | Quality | Sample | Exposure | Outcome | Highest risk group |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rossier et al (2014) [ | Burkina Faso | Cross-sectional | 409 | Medium | Adults (≥35 y) living in formal and informal neighbourhoods of Burkina Faso who died between 2009 and 2011. There were 409 deaths among 20 836 study participants | Education | Mortality From NCDs (CVD, Neoplasms, Other NCDs, Asthma, Diabetes, Liver Disease) | Lower education* (A) (in both formal and informal neighbourhood’s) |
| Standard of living | Lower standard of living* (A) (in both formal and informal neighbourhoods) | |||||||
| Jerliu et al (2013) [ | Kosovo | Cross-sectional | 1890 | Medium | A representative sample of 1890 individuals aged ≥65 y (949 men, mean age 73 ± six years; 941 women, mean age 74 ± 7 y | Education | Presence of self-reported chronic diseases (CVD, diabetes, stomach and liver, lung, neurologic disorders, cancer and other conditions) | No education (A) |
| Self-perceived poverty | Poor† (A) | |||||||
| Education | Multi-morbidity (2 or more chronic conditions) | No education (A) | ||||||
| Self-perceived poverty | Poor* (A) | |||||||
| Binnendijk et al (2012) [ | India | Cross-sectional | 38 205 | Medium | Rural populations from two states in India | Income | Self-reported NCDs (The three most prevalent were musculoskeletal, digestive and cardiovascular problems) | Lower income* (Region of Odisha) |
| Lower income (Region of Bihar) | ||||||||
| Van Minh et al (2008) [ | Vietnam | Cross-sectional | 2484 | Medium | 2484 adults aged 25-74 selected using stratified random sampling for personal household interview | Education (Males) | Self-reported chronic diseases (including chronic joint problems, heart and circulatory conditions, cancer, diabetes, chronic pulmonary diseases and psychological illness) | Lower education |
| SES (Males) | Middle SES | |||||||
| Education (Females) | Lower education* | |||||||
| SES (Females) | Lower SES* | |||||||
NCD – noncommunicable disease, CVD – cardiovascular disease, SES – socio-economic status, A – adjusted
*<0.05.
†<0.01.