Behanova Martina, Reijneveld Sijmen A, Nagyova Iveta, Katreniakova Zuzana, van Ameijden Erik J C, Dijkshoorn Henriëtte, van Dijk Jitse P
1 Graduate School Kosice Institute for Society and Health, Safarik University, Kosice, Slovak Republic.
2 Department of Social Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Institute of Public Health, Safarik University, Kosice, Slovak Republic.
Eur J Public Health. 2017 May 1;27(suppl_2):86-92. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/ckv095.
Evidence shows that living in disadvantaged areas is associated with poor health. This may be due to the socioeconomic (SE) characteristics of both these residents and the areas where they live. Evidence regarding this on Central European (CE) countries is scarce. Our aim was to assess whether the prevalence of poor self-rated health (SRH) was higher in deprived urban areas, whether this can be explained by individual SE status (SES) and whether this differed between Slovakia and the Netherlands per age group. We examined the association of urban-level data and individual-level SE factors from different urban areas in different countries (Slovakia, the Netherlands) using comparable urban health indicators and area indicators. We also obtained unique data from the EU-FP7 EURO-URHIS 2 project. Multilevel logistic regression showed that poor SRH was associated with area deprivation in both countries. Regarding age by country, poor SRH occurred more frequently in the more deprived areas for the younger age group (≤64) in the Netherlands but for the older age group (≥65 years) in Slovakia. Moreover, Slovak citizens reported poor SRH significantly more often than Dutch residents. Individual SES was significantly associated with poor SRH in both age groups and both countries for most area-level SE measures. Individual SES is associated with SRH more strongly than area deprivation. Therefore, it is important to account for relative deprivation at an individual level when considering health-enhancing activities. Moreover, the effect of urban-area deprivation seems to differ between CE and WE countries.
有证据表明,生活在贫困地区与健康状况不佳有关。这可能是由于这些居民及其居住地区的社会经济特征所致。关于中欧国家这方面的证据很少。我们的目的是评估贫困城市地区自我健康评价差(SRH)的患病率是否更高,这是否可以由个体社会经济地位(SES)来解释,以及斯洛伐克和荷兰各年龄组之间是否存在差异。我们使用可比的城市健康指标和地区指标,研究了不同国家(斯洛伐克、荷兰)不同城市地区的城市层面数据与个体层面社会经济因素之间的关联。我们还从欧盟第七框架计划EURO - URHIS 2项目中获取了独特的数据。多层次逻辑回归显示,在这两个国家,自我健康评价差均与地区贫困有关。按国家和年龄来看,在荷兰,较贫困地区自我健康评价差在较年轻年龄组(≤64岁)中更为常见,而在斯洛伐克则在较年长年龄组(≥65岁)中更为常见。此外,斯洛伐克公民报告自我健康评价差的频率明显高于荷兰居民。对于大多数地区层面的社会经济指标,在两个国家的两个年龄组中,个体社会经济地位均与自我健康评价差显著相关。个体社会经济地位与自我健康评价的关联比地区贫困更为强烈。因此,在考虑促进健康的活动时,考虑个体层面的相对贫困很重要。此外,城市地区贫困的影响在中欧国家和西欧国家之间似乎有所不同。