Association Between Sociodemographic Factors and Self-reported Glaucoma in the National Health Interview Survey: A Population-Based Analysis.
Jim Xie, Nikhil S Patil, Marko M Popovic, Peter J Kertes, Rajeev H Muni, Matthew B Schlenker, Iqbal Ike K Ahmed, Radha P Kohly
Summary
Non-Hispanic Black race and poor health status were associated with self-reported glaucoma diagnosis. Physicians and policymakers may consider SDH when assessing clinical risk and designing public health interventions.
Abstract
PURPOSE
To investigate the association between social determinants of health (SDH) in the domains of social and community context, education access, environmental context, economic stability, and healthcare access, with glaucoma prevalence.
DESIGN
Cross-sectional study.
METHODS
The study population consisted of adult participants who answered glaucoma-related questions on the 2017 National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), the most recent iteration that includes glaucoma-related questions. The main outcome measures included the relationships between SDH-related factors and self-reported glaucoma diagnosis as well as self-reported glaucomatous vision loss were examined using univariable and multivariable regression models.
RESULTS
In total, 26,696 of 26,742 (99.83%) NHIS respondents were included, of whom 880 (3.30%) reported a glaucoma diagnosis and 275 (1.03%) reported glaucomatous vision loss. Participants were predominantly middle-aged (50.95 ± 18.60 years), female (54.75%), and non-Hispanic White (70.49%). In age-adjusted multivariable regression (n = 25,456), non-Hispanic Black race (odds ratio [OR] = 1.87, 99% CI = [1.37, 2.55], P < .001, compared to non-Hispanic White race) and poor health status (OR = 1.54, 99% CI = [1.00, 2.37], P = .01, compared to good health status) were significant predictors of glaucoma diagnosis. For glaucomatous vision loss, having an income below the poverty threshold (OR = 2.41, 99% CI = [1.12, 5.20], P = .003, compared to income ≥5 times the poverty threshold) was the only significant predictor in univariable analyses. No SDH-related factors were significantly associated with glaucomatous vision loss in multivariable analysis (n = 848). Multicollinearity was minimal (variation inflation factor<1.6 for all independent variables).
CONCLUSIONS
Non-Hispanic Black race and poor health status were associated with self-reported glaucoma diagnosis. Physicians and policymakers may consider SDH when assessing clinical risk and designing public health interventions.
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