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Individual and neighborhood-level social and deprivation factors impact kidney health in the GLOMMS-CORE study

Individual and neighborhood-level social and deprivation factors impact kidney health in the GLOMMS-CORE study
Individual and neighborhood-level social and deprivation factors impact kidney health in the GLOMMS-CORE study
Prospective cohort studies of kidney equity are limited by a focus on advanced rather than early disease and selective recruitment. Whole population studies frequently rely on area-level measures of deprivation as opposed to individual measures of social disadvantage. Here, we linked kidney health and individual census records in the North of Scotland (Grampian area), 2011-2021 (GLOMMS-CORE) and identified incident kidney presentations at thresholds of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) under 60 (mild/early), under 45 (moderate), under 30 ml/min/1.73m2(advanced), and acute kidney disease (AKD). Household and neighborhood socioeconomic measures, living circumstances, and long-term mortality were compared. Case-mix adjusted multivariable logistic regression (living circumstances), and Cox models (mortality) incorporating an interaction between the household and the neighborhood were used. Among census respondents, there were 48546, 29081, 16116, 28097 incident presentations of each respective eGFR cohort and AKD. Classifications of socioeconomic position by household and neighborhood were related but complex, and frequently did not match. Compared to households of professionals, people with early kidney disease in unskilled or unemployed households had increased mortality (adjusted hazard ratios: 95% confidence intervals) of (1.26: 1.19-1.32) and (1.77: 1.60-1.96), respectively with adjustment for neighborhood indices making little difference. Those within either a deprived household or deprived neighborhood experienced greater mortality, but those within both had the poorest outcomes. Unskilled and unemployed households frequently reported being limited by illness, adverse mental health, living alone, basic accommodation, lack of car ownership, language difficulties, visual and hearing impairments. Thus, impacts of deprivation on kidney health are spread throughout society, complex, serious, and not confined to those living in deprived neighborhoods.
chronic kidney disease, epidemiology, equity, health inequalities, social determinants
0085-2538
928-942
Sawhney, Simon
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Atherton, Iain
66a18532-f1ea-4ce8-a931-fc831f96a558
Blakeman, Thomas
c005e534-1e5e-4f74-a3ef-a4f298519399
Black, Corri
2dd88049-95f0-484b-8aa0-878e8f52bf0e
Cowan, Eilidh
486d68ae-2f1f-40e4-a153-6c8740382374
Croucher, Catherine
f3ee538e-c538-48eb-8e6d-babee5a4bcd6
Fraser, Simon D.S.
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Hughes, Audrey
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Nath, Mintu
cac1731e-36b5-4749-b3a0-786162fa8eb8
Nitsch, Dorothea
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Scholes-Robertson, Nicole
a5fd4caa-3773-4f70-8137-e51772b03def
Rzewuska Diaz, Magdalena
3f47d443-66d8-4677-abde-c85b631325b3
Sawhney, Simon
f1117f11-d5fd-4c2b-8bcc-6943d8f529d7
Atherton, Iain
66a18532-f1ea-4ce8-a931-fc831f96a558
Blakeman, Thomas
c005e534-1e5e-4f74-a3ef-a4f298519399
Black, Corri
2dd88049-95f0-484b-8aa0-878e8f52bf0e
Cowan, Eilidh
486d68ae-2f1f-40e4-a153-6c8740382374
Croucher, Catherine
f3ee538e-c538-48eb-8e6d-babee5a4bcd6
Fraser, Simon D.S.
135884b6-8737-4e8a-a98c-5d803ac7a2dc
Hughes, Audrey
835b923b-7b60-4267-923c-acbfc54c9b3b
Nath, Mintu
cac1731e-36b5-4749-b3a0-786162fa8eb8
Nitsch, Dorothea
2c762df5-7ed0-401a-a759-5d39b8d92e4e
Scholes-Robertson, Nicole
a5fd4caa-3773-4f70-8137-e51772b03def
Rzewuska Diaz, Magdalena
3f47d443-66d8-4677-abde-c85b631325b3

Sawhney, Simon, Atherton, Iain, Blakeman, Thomas, Black, Corri, Cowan, Eilidh, Croucher, Catherine, Fraser, Simon D.S., Hughes, Audrey, Nath, Mintu, Nitsch, Dorothea, Scholes-Robertson, Nicole and Rzewuska Diaz, Magdalena (2024) Individual and neighborhood-level social and deprivation factors impact kidney health in the GLOMMS-CORE study. Kidney International, 106 (5), 928-942. (doi:10.1016/j.kint.2024.07.021).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Prospective cohort studies of kidney equity are limited by a focus on advanced rather than early disease and selective recruitment. Whole population studies frequently rely on area-level measures of deprivation as opposed to individual measures of social disadvantage. Here, we linked kidney health and individual census records in the North of Scotland (Grampian area), 2011-2021 (GLOMMS-CORE) and identified incident kidney presentations at thresholds of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) under 60 (mild/early), under 45 (moderate), under 30 ml/min/1.73m2(advanced), and acute kidney disease (AKD). Household and neighborhood socioeconomic measures, living circumstances, and long-term mortality were compared. Case-mix adjusted multivariable logistic regression (living circumstances), and Cox models (mortality) incorporating an interaction between the household and the neighborhood were used. Among census respondents, there were 48546, 29081, 16116, 28097 incident presentations of each respective eGFR cohort and AKD. Classifications of socioeconomic position by household and neighborhood were related but complex, and frequently did not match. Compared to households of professionals, people with early kidney disease in unskilled or unemployed households had increased mortality (adjusted hazard ratios: 95% confidence intervals) of (1.26: 1.19-1.32) and (1.77: 1.60-1.96), respectively with adjustment for neighborhood indices making little difference. Those within either a deprived household or deprived neighborhood experienced greater mortality, but those within both had the poorest outcomes. Unskilled and unemployed households frequently reported being limited by illness, adverse mental health, living alone, basic accommodation, lack of car ownership, language difficulties, visual and hearing impairments. Thus, impacts of deprivation on kidney health are spread throughout society, complex, serious, and not confined to those living in deprived neighborhoods.

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Accepted/In Press date: 12 July 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 August 2024
Published date: 18 October 2024
Keywords: chronic kidney disease, epidemiology, equity, health inequalities, social determinants

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492788
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492788
ISSN: 0085-2538
PURE UUID: 27a8fd92-ea19-4456-821f-039a9f15669a
ORCID for Simon D.S. Fraser: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4172-4406

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Date deposited: 14 Aug 2024 16:32
Last modified: 20 Dec 2024 02:42

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Contributors

Author: Simon Sawhney
Author: Iain Atherton
Author: Thomas Blakeman
Author: Corri Black
Author: Eilidh Cowan
Author: Catherine Croucher
Author: Audrey Hughes
Author: Mintu Nath
Author: Dorothea Nitsch
Author: Nicole Scholes-Robertson
Author: Magdalena Rzewuska Diaz

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