Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models

The traditional explanatory models used in epidemiology are “disease specific”, identifying risk factors for specific health conditions. Yet social exposures lead to a generalized, cumulative health impact which may not be specific to one illness. Disease-specific models may therefore misestimate so...

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Main Authors: Heather L. White, Patricia O'Campo, Flora I. Matheson, Rahim Moineddin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2013-03-01
Series:International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/10/4/1186
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spelling doaj-228f8886265c46c7ad0eb18afd7d92e02020-11-24T23:11:15ZengMDPI AGInternational Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health1660-46012013-03-011041186120110.3390/ijerph10041186Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific ModelsHeather L. WhitePatricia O'CampoFlora I. MathesonRahim MoineddinThe traditional explanatory models used in epidemiology are “disease specific”, identifying risk factors for specific health conditions. Yet social exposures lead to a generalized, cumulative health impact which may not be specific to one illness. Disease-specific models may therefore misestimate social factors’ effects on health. Using data from the Canadian Community Health Survey and Canada 2001 Census we construct and compare “disease-specific” and “generalized health impact” (GHI) models to gauge the negative health effects of one social exposure: socioeconomic position (SEP). We use logistic and multinomial multilevel modeling with neighbourhood-level material deprivation, individual-level education and household income to compare and contrast the two approaches. In disease-specific models, the social determinants under study were each associated with the health conditions of interest. However, larger effect sizes were apparent when outcomes were modeled as compound health problems (0, 1, 2, or 3+ conditions) using the GHI approach. To more accurately estimate social exposures’ impacts on population health, researchers should consider a GHI framework.http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/10/4/1186social determinantssocioeconomic positionmultinomial regressionmultilevel modelinghealth inequities
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Heather L. White
Patricia O'Campo
Flora I. Matheson
Rahim Moineddin
spellingShingle Heather L. White
Patricia O'Campo
Flora I. Matheson
Rahim Moineddin
Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
social determinants
socioeconomic position
multinomial regression
multilevel modeling
health inequities
author_facet Heather L. White
Patricia O'Campo
Flora I. Matheson
Rahim Moineddin
author_sort Heather L. White
title Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
title_short Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
title_full Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
title_fullStr Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the Cumulative Effects of Social Exposures on Health: Moving beyond Disease-Specific Models
title_sort modeling the cumulative effects of social exposures on health: moving beyond disease-specific models
publisher MDPI AG
series International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
issn 1660-4601
publishDate 2013-03-01
description The traditional explanatory models used in epidemiology are “disease specific”, identifying risk factors for specific health conditions. Yet social exposures lead to a generalized, cumulative health impact which may not be specific to one illness. Disease-specific models may therefore misestimate social factors’ effects on health. Using data from the Canadian Community Health Survey and Canada 2001 Census we construct and compare “disease-specific” and “generalized health impact” (GHI) models to gauge the negative health effects of one social exposure: socioeconomic position (SEP). We use logistic and multinomial multilevel modeling with neighbourhood-level material deprivation, individual-level education and household income to compare and contrast the two approaches. In disease-specific models, the social determinants under study were each associated with the health conditions of interest. However, larger effect sizes were apparent when outcomes were modeled as compound health problems (0, 1, 2, or 3+ conditions) using the GHI approach. To more accurately estimate social exposures’ impacts on population health, researchers should consider a GHI framework.
topic social determinants
socioeconomic position
multinomial regression
multilevel modeling
health inequities
url http://www.mdpi.com/1660-4601/10/4/1186
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