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1型糖尿病青少年的健康差异:对当前文献的系统综述。

Health disparities among youth with type 1 diabetes: A systematic review of the current literature.

作者信息

Borschuk Adrienne P, Everhart Robin S

机构信息

Department of Psychology.

出版信息

Fam Syst Health. 2015 Sep;33(3):297-313. doi: 10.1037/fsh0000134. Epub 2015 May 18.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION

Research in pediatric Type 1 diabetes (T1D) has reliably identified differences in health outcomes based on race/ethnicity and socioeconomic status (SES). Racial/ethnic minority and/or low-SES youth consistently display poorer physical health and psychological functioning than racial/ethnic majority and higher-SES youth. The purpose of this review is to better understand health disparities in T1D by race/ethnicity and SES, and to provide recommendations for researchers based on these findings.

METHODS

Articles were obtained from PsycINFO, PubMed, and Web of Knowledge with search terms: "Type 1 diabetes," "ethnic," "pediatric," "race/ethnicity," "race," "socioeconomic status," "SES," and "income." Criteria for inclusion were (a) Type 1 diabetes cases, (b) child or adolescent samples, (c) information about health or psychosocial outcomes grouped by race/ethnicity or SES, (d) no intervention data, (e) peer-reviewed, (f), English-language, and (g) published in an academic journal.

RESULTS

Twenty-seven articles reported on health outcomes and 4 articles reported on psychosocial outcomes. Across 16 studies, racial/ethnic minority youth displayed higher HbA1c levels compared to Caucasian youth. Eighteen studies reported that lower-SES youth had higher HbA1c levels than higher-SES youth. Four studies found racial/ethnic minority youth and lower-SES youth had poorer psychological functioning than Caucasian youth or higher-SES youth.

DISCUSSION

Findings from our review suggest an association between race/ethnicity, SES, and health outcomes in pediatric T1D. Researchers should consider developing interventions that take into account factors which may place children from racial/ethnic minority and lower-SES backgrounds at risk for poor metabolic control and emotional functioning. Future research should examine causative mechanisms of health disparities.

摘要

引言

关于儿童1型糖尿病(T1D)的研究已经确切地发现,基于种族/民族和社会经济地位(SES),健康结果存在差异。与种族/民族多数群体和高社会经济地位的青少年相比,种族/民族少数群体和/或低社会经济地位的青少年在身体健康和心理功能方面始终表现较差。本综述的目的是更好地了解T1D中基于种族/民族和社会经济地位的健康差异,并根据这些发现为研究人员提供建议。

方法

从PsycINFO、PubMed和Web of Knowledge获取文章,搜索词为:“1型糖尿病”、“种族”、“儿科”、“种族/民族”、“种族”、“社会经济地位”、“SES”和“收入”。纳入标准为:(a)1型糖尿病病例,(b)儿童或青少年样本,(c)按种族/民族或社会经济地位分组的健康或心理社会结果信息,(d)无干预数据,(e)经过同行评审,(f)英文,(g)发表在学术期刊上。

结果

27篇文章报告了健康结果,4篇文章报告了心理社会结果。在16项研究中,与白人青少年相比,种族/民族少数群体青少年的糖化血红蛋白(HbA1c)水平更高。18项研究报告称,低社会经济地位的青少年比高社会经济地位的青少年有更高的HbA1c水平。4项研究发现,种族/民族少数群体青少年和低社会经济地位的青少年在心理功能方面比白人青少年或高社会经济地位的青少年更差。

讨论

我们综述的结果表明,在儿童T1D中,种族/民族、社会经济地位和健康结果之间存在关联。研究人员应考虑制定干预措施,将可能使来自种族/民族少数群体和低社会经济地位背景的儿童面临代谢控制不良和情绪功能风险的因素考虑在内。未来的研究应探讨健康差异的因果机制。

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