| Literature DB >> 30517185 |
Ana Isabel Ribeiro1,2, Ludivine Launay3, Elodie Guillaume3, Guy Launoy3, Henrique Barros1,2.
Abstract
Socioeconomic inequalities are major health determinants. To monitor and understand them at local level, ecological indexes of socioeconomic deprivation constitute essential tools. In this study, we describe the development of the updated version of the European Deprivation Index for Portuguese small-areas (EDI-PT), describe its spatial distribution and evaluate its association with a general health indicator-all-cause mortality in the period 2009-2012. Using data from the 2011 European Union-Statistics on Income and Living Conditions Survey (EU-SILC), we obtained an indicator of individual deprivation. After identifying variables that were common to both the EU-SILC and the census, we used the indicator of individual deprivation to test if these variables were associated with individual-level deprivation, and to compute weights. Accordingly, eight variables were included. The EDI-PT was produced for the smallest area unit possible (n = 18084 census block groups, mean/area = 584 inhabitants) and resulted from the weighted sum of the eight selected variables. It was then categorized into quintiles (Q1-least deprived to Q5-most deprived). To estimate the association with mortality we fitted Bayesian spatial models. The EDI-PT was unevenly distributed across Portugal-most deprived areas concentrated in the South and in the inner North and Centre of the country, and the least deprived in the coastal North and Centre. The EDI-PT was positively and significantly associated with overall mortality, and this relation followed a rather clear dose-response relation of increasing mortality as deprivation increases (Relative Risk Q2 = 1.012, 95% Credible Interval 0.991-1.033; Q3 = 1.026, 1.004-1.048; Q4 = 1.053, 1.029-1.077; Q5 = 1.068, 1.042-1.095). Summing up, we updated the index of socioeconomic deprivation for Portuguese small-areas, and we showed that the EDI-PT constitutes a sensitive measure to capture health inequalities, since it was consistently associated with a key measure of population health/development, all-cause mortality. We strongly believe this updated version will be widely employed by social and medical researchers and regional planners.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30517185 PMCID: PMC6281298 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0208320
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Identification of fundamental needs: Proportion of Portuguese households that indicated that specific goods and services were not within their means (EU-SILC survey 2011, n = 5740 households).
| Type of need | % of households that cannot afford |
|---|---|
| Using your own means to cover a necessary yet unplanned expense | 29.7 |
| Keeping your house adequately warm | 26.9 |
| Having a personal car | 9.7 |
| Having a computer | 8.8 |
| Eating a meal containing meat, fish, or the vegetarian equivalent once every two days | 3.5 |
| Having a phone (including mobile phone) | 2.8 |
| Having a washing machine | 2.5 |
| Having a colour TV | 0.7 |
Final model of multivariable logistic regression selecting components of EDI, which were associated with the final individual deprivation indicator, Portuguese EU-SILC (n = 12 489).
| Variable | β | OR (95% CI) |
|---|---|---|
| Non-owned households | 1.191 | 3.291 (2.822–3.839) |
| Households without indoor flushing | 1.729 | 5.637 (3.153–10.078) |
| Households with 5 rooms or less | 0.964 | 2.621 (2.043–3.363) |
| Blue-collars | 0.370 | 1.447 (1.233–1.698) |
| Residents with low education level (≤6 years) | 0.511 | 1.667 (1.405–1.978) |
| Non-employers | 0.620 | 1.858 (1.181–2.923) |
| Unemployed looking for a job | 0.268 | 1.307 (1.127–1.516) |
| Foreign residents | 1.038 | 2.823 (1.748–4.560) |
*Odds ratio and 95% confidence intervals.
Summary statistics of the census variables included in the construction of the EDI-PT score (n = 10 562 178 residents, n = 3 997 724 households).
| Census variable | Percentage |
|---|---|
| Non-owned households | 26.8% |
| Households without indoor flushing | 0.9% |
| Households with 5 rooms or less | 73.3% |
| Blue-collars | 37.3% |
| Residents with low education level (≤6 years) | 47.9% |
| Non-employers | 89.5% |
| Unemployed looking for a job | 13.2% |
| Foreign residents | 3.4% |
Fig 1Spatial distribution of the European Deprivation Index for Portuguese small-areas in Continental Portugal.
(A: Census block groups; B: Parishes; C: Municipalities).
Fig 2Spatial distribution of the European Deprivation Index for Portuguese small-areas in archipelagos.
(A: Census block groups; B: Parishes; C: Municipalities).
Association (Relative Risk and 95% Credible Intervals) between the European Deprivation Index quintiles (Q1-least deprived to Q5-most deprived) and age-adjusted mortality rates in Portugal (n = 4260 parishes, 2009–2012).
| Socioeconomic deprivation | RR (95% Credible Interval) |
|---|---|
| Q1 –least deprived | 1.000 (Ref) |
| Q2 | 1.012 (0.991–1.033) |
| Q3 | 1.026 (1.004–1.048) |
| Q4 | 1.053 (1.029–1.077) |
| Q5 –most deprived | 1.068 (1.042–1.095) |