Contribution of chronic diseases to educational disparity in disability in France: Results from the cross-sectional "disability-health" survey

2Citations
Citations of this article
39Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Background: This study aimed 1) to assess whether the contribution of chronic conditions to disability varies according to the educational attainment, 2) to disentangle the contributions of the prevalence and of the disabling impact of chronic conditions to educational disparities. Methods: Data of the 2008-09 Disability Health Survey were examined (N = 23,348). The disability indicator was the Global Activity Limitation Indicator (GALI). The attribution method based on an additive hazard model was used to estimate educational differences in disabling impacts and in the contributions of diseases to disability. Counterfactual analyses were used to disentangle the contribution of differences in disease prevalence vs. disabling impact. Results: In men, the main contributors to educational difference in disability prevalence were arthritis (contribution to disability prevalence: 5.7% (95% CI 5.4-6.0) for low-educated vs. 3.3% (3.0-3.9) for high-educated men), spine disorders (back/neck pain, deformity) (3.8% (3.6-4.0) vs. 1.9% (1.8-2.1)), chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (2.4% (2.3-2.6) vs. 0.6% (0.5-0.7)) and ischemic heart /peripheral artery diseases (4.1% (3.9-4.3) vs. 2.4% (2.2-3.0)). In women, arthritis (9.5% (9.1-9.9) vs. 4.5%, (4.1-5.2)), spine disorders (4.5% (4.3-4.7) vs. 2.1% 1.9-2.3) and psychiatric diseases (3.1% (3.0-3.3) vs. 1.1% (1.0-1.3)) contributed most to education gap in disability. The educational differences were equally explained by differences in the disease prevalence and in their disabling impact. Conclusions: Public health policies aiming to reduce existing socioeconomic disparities in disability should focus on musculoskeletal, pulmonary, psychiatric and ischemic heart diseases, reducing their prevalence as well as their disabling impact in lower socioeconomic groups.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Palazzo, C., Yokota, R. T. C., Tafforeau, J., Ravaud, J. F., Cambois, E., Poiraudeau, S., … Nusselder, W. J. (2019). Contribution of chronic diseases to educational disparity in disability in France: Results from the cross-sectional “disability-health” survey. Archives of Public Health, 77(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s13690-018-0326-9

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free