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首页> 外文期刊>International journal for equity in health >Socioeconomic status and self-reported asthma in Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian adults aged 18-64 years: analysis of national survey data
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Socioeconomic status and self-reported asthma in Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian adults aged 18-64 years: analysis of national survey data

机译:18-64岁澳大利亚土著和非土著成年人的社会经济状况和自我报告的哮喘:国家调查数据分析

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Background Asthma is more common among Indigenous than non-Indigenous Australian adults, but little is known about socioeconomic patterning of asthma within the Indigenous population, or whether it is similar to the non-Indigenous population. Methods I analysed weighted data on self-reported current diagnosed asthma and a range of socio-economic and demographic measures for 5,417 Indigenous and 15,432 non-Indigenous adults aged 18-64 years from two nationally representative surveys conducted in parallel by the Australian Bureau of Statistics in 2004-05. Results Current asthma prevalence was higher for Indigenous than non-Indigenous people in every age group. After adjusting for age and sex, main language and place of residence were significantly associated with asthma prevalence in both populations. Traditional SES variables such as education, income and employment status were significantly associated with asthma in the non-Indigenous but not the Indigenous population. For example, age-and sex-adjusted relative odds of asthma among those who did not complete Year 10 (versus those who did) was 1.2 (95% confidence interval (CI) 1.0-1.5) in the non-Indigenous population versus 1.0 (95% CI 0.8-1.3) in the Indigenous population. Conclusions The socioeconomic patterning of asthma among Indigenous Australians is much less pronounced than for other chronic diseases such as diabetes and kidney disease, and contrasts with asthma patterns in the non-Indigenous population. This may be due in part to the episodic nature of asthma, and the well-known challenges in diagnosing it, especially among people with limited health literacy and/or limited access to health care, both of which are more likely in the Indigenous population. It may also reflect the importance of exposures occurring across the socioeconomic spectrum among Indigenous Australians, such as racism, and discrimination, marginalization and dispossession, chronic stress and exposure to violence.
机译:背景技术哮喘在澳大利亚土著居民中比在澳大利亚土著居民中更为普遍,但是对于哮喘在土著人口中的社会经济模式或是否与非土著人口相似,人们所知甚少。方法我通过澳大利亚统计局同时进行的两项全国代表性调查,分析了自我报告的当前诊断出的哮喘的加权数据以及年龄在18-64岁之间的5,417名土著人和15,432名非土著成年人的一系列社会经济和人口统计学指标在2004-05年。结果每个年龄段的土著人当前哮喘患病率均高于非土著人。在调整了年龄和性别之后,两种人群的主要语言和居住地均与哮喘患病率显着相关。在非土著人群中,传统的SES变量(如教育程度,收入和就业状况)与哮喘显着相关,而与土著人群无关。例如,在非土著人口中,未完成10年级学习的人(与做过10年级学习的人相比)的年龄和性别调整后的相对几率是1.2(95%置信区间(CI)1.0-1.5)对1.0( 95%CI 0.8-1.3)。结论与其他慢性疾病(如糖尿病和肾脏疾病)相比,澳大利亚土著人哮喘的社会经济模式不那么明显,并且与非土著人群的哮喘模式形成鲜明对比。这可能部分是由于哮喘的发作性,以及诊断哮喘的众所周知的挑战,特别是在健康素养有限和/或获得医疗保健机会有限的人群中,这两种情况在原住民中更可能发生。这也可能反映出土著澳大利亚人在整个社会经济范围内发生暴露的重要性,例如种族主义,歧视,边缘化和剥夺,长期压力和暴力暴露。

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