Educational level, marital status and sex as social gender discharge determinants in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease exacerbations: a time-to-event analysis.


Journal

Monaldi archives for chest disease = Archivio Monaldi per le malattie del torace
ISSN: 1122-0643
Titre abrégé: Monaldi Arch Chest Dis
Pays: Italy
ID NLM: 9307314

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
24 May 2019
Historique:
received: 17 12 2018
accepted: 14 05 2019
entrez: 25 5 2019
pubmed: 28 5 2019
medline: 24 12 2019
Statut: epublish

Résumé

The aim of this study is to evaluate, in patients hospitalized for COPD exacerbation, how educational level, marital status and sex (social gender indicators) affect the prognosis (main effects) and how interact with each other in affecting prognosis (effect modification). Data for all patients discharged with a principal diagnosis of COPD with exacerbation (ICD-9 491.21) by Apulian facilities between 2013 and 2017 were retrieved from the National Hospital Discharge Register Database. A multivariable multi-stratified frailty cox proportional-hazard regression with interaction terms was fitted in order to assess the effect of sex, educational level and marital status on the time-to-event for home discharge through the estimation of hazard ratios. Adjusting for several hospitalization characteristics and for healthcare facilities, low educational level (<8 years of schooling) seems to be a risk factor in both sexes and in all marital status categories (HR 0.92, 95%CI 0.87-0.97, p=0.0020). Female sex seems to be a risk factor only in married patients (HR 0.83, 95%CI 0.78-0.88, p<0.0001). Marital status different from married seems to be a risk factor only in male patients, in particular single patients (HR 0.82, 95%CI 0.74-0.92, p=0.0009), separated or divorced patients (HR 0.71, 95%CI 0.58-0.86, p=0.0005) and widowed patients (HR 0.87, 95%CI 0.80-0.95, p=0.0018). Differently from findings about protective effect of education, the evidence of different effects of sex among civil statuses and of different effect of civil status among sexes is supposed to be a proxy for social gender health and healthcare inequalities.

Identifiants

pubmed: 31122005
doi: 10.4081/monaldi.2019.1017
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Auteurs

Orazio Valerio Giannico (OV)

Department of Biomedical Sciences and Human Oncology, University of Bari Aldo Moro. oraziovaleriogiannico@gmail.com.

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