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Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations

BACKGROUND: Most major diseases have important social determinants. In this context, classification of disease based on etiologic or anatomic criteria may be neither mutually exclusive nor optimal. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Units of analysis comprised large metropolitan central and fringe metropolitan c...

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Autores principales: Levine, Robert S., Kilbourne, Barbara A., Rust, George S., Langston, Michael A., Husaini, Baqar A., Gittner, Lisaann S., Sanderson, Maureen, Hennekens, Charles H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25372286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110271
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author Levine, Robert S.
Kilbourne, Barbara A.
Rust, George S.
Langston, Michael A.
Husaini, Baqar A.
Gittner, Lisaann S.
Sanderson, Maureen
Hennekens, Charles H.
author_facet Levine, Robert S.
Kilbourne, Barbara A.
Rust, George S.
Langston, Michael A.
Husaini, Baqar A.
Gittner, Lisaann S.
Sanderson, Maureen
Hennekens, Charles H.
author_sort Levine, Robert S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Most major diseases have important social determinants. In this context, classification of disease based on etiologic or anatomic criteria may be neither mutually exclusive nor optimal. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Units of analysis comprised large metropolitan central and fringe metropolitan counties with reliable mortality rates – (n = 416). Participants included infants and adults ages 25 to 64 years with selected causes of death (1999 to 2006). Exposures included that residential segregation and race-specific social deprivation variables. Main outcome measures were obtained via principal components analyses with an orthogonal rotation to identify a common factor. To discern whether the common factor was socially mediated, negative binomial multiple regression models were developed for which the dependent variable was the common factor. Results showed that infant deaths, mortality from assault, and malignant neoplasm of the trachea, bronchus and lung formed a common factor for race-gender groups (black/white and men/women). Regression analyses showed statistically significant, positive associations between low socio-economic status for all race-gender groups and this common factor. CONCLUSIONS: Between 1999 and 2006, deaths classified as “assault” and “lung cancer”, as well as “infant mortality” formed a socially mediated factor detectable in population but not individual data. Despite limitations related to death certificate data, the results contribute important information to the formulation of several hypotheses: (a) disease classifications based on anatomic or etiologic criteria fail to account for social determinants; (b) social forces produce demographically and possibly geographically distinct population-based disease constellations; and (c) the individual components of population-based disease constellations (e.g., lung cancer) are phenotypically comparable from one population to another but genotypically different, in part, because of socially mediated epigenetic variations. Additional research may produce new taxonomies that unify social determinants with anatomic and/or etiologic determinants. This may lead to improved medical management of individuals and populations.
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spelling pubmed-42209312014-11-12 Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations Levine, Robert S. Kilbourne, Barbara A. Rust, George S. Langston, Michael A. Husaini, Baqar A. Gittner, Lisaann S. Sanderson, Maureen Hennekens, Charles H. PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Most major diseases have important social determinants. In this context, classification of disease based on etiologic or anatomic criteria may be neither mutually exclusive nor optimal. METHODS AND FINDINGS: Units of analysis comprised large metropolitan central and fringe metropolitan counties with reliable mortality rates – (n = 416). Participants included infants and adults ages 25 to 64 years with selected causes of death (1999 to 2006). Exposures included that residential segregation and race-specific social deprivation variables. Main outcome measures were obtained via principal components analyses with an orthogonal rotation to identify a common factor. To discern whether the common factor was socially mediated, negative binomial multiple regression models were developed for which the dependent variable was the common factor. Results showed that infant deaths, mortality from assault, and malignant neoplasm of the trachea, bronchus and lung formed a common factor for race-gender groups (black/white and men/women). Regression analyses showed statistically significant, positive associations between low socio-economic status for all race-gender groups and this common factor. CONCLUSIONS: Between 1999 and 2006, deaths classified as “assault” and “lung cancer”, as well as “infant mortality” formed a socially mediated factor detectable in population but not individual data. Despite limitations related to death certificate data, the results contribute important information to the formulation of several hypotheses: (a) disease classifications based on anatomic or etiologic criteria fail to account for social determinants; (b) social forces produce demographically and possibly geographically distinct population-based disease constellations; and (c) the individual components of population-based disease constellations (e.g., lung cancer) are phenotypically comparable from one population to another but genotypically different, in part, because of socially mediated epigenetic variations. Additional research may produce new taxonomies that unify social determinants with anatomic and/or etiologic determinants. This may lead to improved medical management of individuals and populations. Public Library of Science 2014-11-05 /pmc/articles/PMC4220931/ /pubmed/25372286 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110271 Text en © 2014 Levine et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Levine, Robert S.
Kilbourne, Barbara A.
Rust, George S.
Langston, Michael A.
Husaini, Baqar A.
Gittner, Lisaann S.
Sanderson, Maureen
Hennekens, Charles H.
Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title_full Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title_fullStr Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title_full_unstemmed Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title_short Social Determinants and the Classification of Disease: Descriptive Epidemiology of Selected Socially Mediated Disease Constellations
title_sort social determinants and the classification of disease: descriptive epidemiology of selected socially mediated disease constellations
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4220931/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25372286
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0110271
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