Can patient self-management help explain the SES health gradient?
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 24 July 2002
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 99 (16), 10929-10934
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.162086599
Abstract
There are large differences in health outcomes by socioeconomic status (SES) that cannot be explained fully by traditional arguments, such as access to care or poor health behaviors. We consider a different explanation—better self-management of disease by the more educated. We examine differences by education in treatment adherence among patients with two illnesses, diabetes and HIV, and then assess the subsequent impact of differential adherence on health status. One unique component of this research is that for diabetes we combine two different surveys—one cohort study and one randomized clinical trial—that are usually used exclusively by either biomedical or/and social scientists separately. For both illnesses, we find significant effects of adherence that are much stronger among patients with high SES. After controlling for other factors, more educated HIV+ patients are more likely to adhere to therapy, and this adherence made them experience improvements in their self-reported general health. Similarly, among diabetics, the less educated were much more likely to switch treatment, which led to worsening general health. In the randomized trial setting, intensive treatment regimens that compensated for poor adherence led to better improvements in glycemic control for the less educated. Among two distinct chronic illnesses, the ability to maintain a better health regimen is an important independent determinant of subsequent health outcomes. This finding is robust across clinical trial and population-based settings. Because this ability varies by schooling, self-maintenance is an important reason for the steep SES gradient in health outcomes.All Related Versions
This publication has 18 references indexed in Scilit:
- Access of vulnerable groups to antiretroviral therapy among persons in care for HIV disease in the United States. HCSUS Consortium. HIV Cost and Services Utilization Study.2000
- Inequality in QualityJAMA, 2000
- Adherence to HIV combination therapySocial Science & Medicine, 2000
- Healthy Bodies and Thick Wallets: The Dual Relation Between Health and Economic StatusJournal of Economic Perspectives, 1999
- Declining Morbidity and Mortality among Patients with Advanced Human Immunodeficiency Virus InfectionNew England Journal of Medicine, 1998
- Prognostic Indicators for AIDS and Infectious Disease Death in HIV-Infected Injection Drug UsersJAMA, 1998
- Price of Adaptation—Allostatic Load and Its Health ConsequencesArchives of Internal Medicine, 1997
- Childhood influences on adult health: a review of recent work from the British 1946 national birth cohort study, the MRC National Survey of Health and DevelopmentPaediatric and Perinatal Epidemiology, 1997
- The Diabetes Control and Complications Trial -- Implications for Policy and PracticeNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993
- The Effect of Intensive Treatment of Diabetes on the Development and Progression of Long-Term Complications in Insulin-Dependent Diabetes MellitusNew England Journal of Medicine, 1993