Rosenstock Summer, Whitman Steve, West Joseph F, Balkin Michael
Sinai Urban Health Institute, Sinai Health System, Chicago, IL, USA,
J Urban Health. 2014 Oct;91(5):873-85. doi: 10.1007/s11524-013-9861-4.
While studies have consistently shown that in the USA, non-Hispanic Blacks (Blacks) have higher diabetes prevalence, complication and death rates than non-Hispanic Whites (Whites), there are no studies that compare disparities in diabetes mortality across the largest US cities. This study presents and compares Black/White age-adjusted diabetes mortality rate ratios (RRs), calculated using national death files and census data, for the 50 most populous US cities. Relationships between city-level diabetes mortality RRs and 12 ecological variables were explored using bivariate correlation analyses. Multivariate analyses were conducted using negative binomial regression to examine how much of the disparity could be explained by these variables. Blacks had statistically significantly higher mortality rates compared to Whites in 39 of the 41 cities included in analyses, with statistically significant rate ratios ranging from 1.57 (95 % CI: 1.33-1.86) in Baltimore to 3.78 (95 % CI: 2.84-5.02) in Washington, DC. Analyses showed that economic inequality was strongly correlated with the diabetes mortality disparity, driven by differences in White poverty levels. This was followed by segregation. Multivariate analyses showed that adjusting for Black/White poverty alone explained 58.5 % of the disparity. Adjusting for Black/White poverty and segregation explained 72.6 % of the disparity. This study emphasizes the role that inequalities in social and economic determinants, rather than for example poverty on its own, play in Black/White diabetes mortality disparities. It also highlights how the magnitude of the disparity and the factors that influence it can vary greatly across cities, underscoring the importance of using local data to identify context specific barriers and develop effective interventions to eliminate health disparities.
虽然研究一直表明,在美国,非西班牙裔黑人(黑人)的糖尿病患病率、并发症和死亡率高于非西班牙裔白人(白人),但尚无研究比较美国最大城市间糖尿病死亡率的差异。本研究呈现并比较了美国50个人口最多城市中,使用国家死亡档案和人口普查数据计算得出的黑人/白人年龄调整糖尿病死亡率比(RRs)。使用双变量相关分析探讨了城市层面糖尿病死亡率RRs与12个生态变量之间的关系。使用负二项回归进行多变量分析,以检验这些变量能够解释多少差异。在纳入分析的41个城市中,有39个城市黑人的死亡率在统计学上显著高于白人,统计学上显著的率比范围从巴尔的摩的1.57(95%CI:1.33 - 1.86)到华盛顿特区的3.78(95%CI:2.84 - 5.02)。分析表明,经济不平等与糖尿病死亡率差异密切相关,这是由白人贫困水平的差异驱动的。其次是隔离。多变量分析表明,仅调整黑人/白人贫困状况就能解释58.5%的差异。同时调整黑人/白人贫困状况和隔离因素能解释差异的72.6%。本研究强调了社会和经济决定因素中的不平等,而非例如单独的贫困,在黑人/白人糖尿病死亡率差异中所起的作用。它还突出了差异的程度以及影响差异的因素在不同城市可能有很大差异,强调了利用当地数据来识别特定背景下的障碍并制定有效干预措施以消除健康差异的重要性。