Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation

Detalhes bibliográficos
Autor(a) principal: Anderle, Paula
Data de Publicação: 2023
Outros Autores: Ziegelmann, Patricia Klarmann, Goulart, Bárbara Niegia Garcia de
Tipo de documento: Artigo
Idioma: eng
Título da fonte: Repositório Institucional da UFRGS
Texto Completo: http://hdl.handle.net/10183/257685
Resumo: Background Perceived health is a well-known, low-cost measure in public health, and has been used in several studies on individuals with impairment. Although many studies have related impairment to self-rated health (SRH), few have considered the origin and degree of limitation of the impairment. This study examined whether physical, hearing, or visual impairments—when analyzed according to origin (congenital or acquired) and degree of limitation (with or without)—are associated with the SRH status. Methods This cross-sectional study used data of 43,681 adult individuals from the Brazilian National Health Survey (NHS, 2013). The outcome SRH was dichotomized into poor (including the regular, poor, and very poor responses) or good (including the good and very good responses). Crude and adjusted (for socio-demographic characteristics and chronic diseases history) prevalence ratios (PR) estimates were evaluated using Poisson regression models with the robust variance estimator. Results Poor SRH prevalence was estimated at 31.8% (95%CI:31.0–33.0) among the non-impaired population, 65.6% (95%CI:60.6–70.0) among individuals with physical impairment, 50.3% (95%CI:45.0–56.0) for people with hearing impairment, and 55.3% (95%CI:51.8–59.0) for the visually impaired. Individuals with congenital physical impairment— with or without limitations—presented the strongest association with the poorest SRH status. Participants with non-limiting, congenital hearing impairment showed a protective factor to poor SRH (PR=0.40 95%CI: 0.38–0.52). Individuals with acquired visual impairment with limitations demonstrated the strongest association with poor SRH (PR=1.48 95%CI:1.47–1.49). Among the impaired population, middle-aged participants showed a stronger association with poor SRH than older adult participants. Conclusions Impairment is associated with poor SRH status, especially among people with physical impairment. The origin and degree of limitation of each type of impairment differently impacts SRH among the impaired population.
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spelling Anderle, PaulaZiegelmann, Patricia KlarmannGoulart, Bárbara Niegia Garcia de2023-05-03T03:36:51Z20231471-2458http://hdl.handle.net/10183/257685001166009Background Perceived health is a well-known, low-cost measure in public health, and has been used in several studies on individuals with impairment. Although many studies have related impairment to self-rated health (SRH), few have considered the origin and degree of limitation of the impairment. This study examined whether physical, hearing, or visual impairments—when analyzed according to origin (congenital or acquired) and degree of limitation (with or without)—are associated with the SRH status. Methods This cross-sectional study used data of 43,681 adult individuals from the Brazilian National Health Survey (NHS, 2013). The outcome SRH was dichotomized into poor (including the regular, poor, and very poor responses) or good (including the good and very good responses). Crude and adjusted (for socio-demographic characteristics and chronic diseases history) prevalence ratios (PR) estimates were evaluated using Poisson regression models with the robust variance estimator. Results Poor SRH prevalence was estimated at 31.8% (95%CI:31.0–33.0) among the non-impaired population, 65.6% (95%CI:60.6–70.0) among individuals with physical impairment, 50.3% (95%CI:45.0–56.0) for people with hearing impairment, and 55.3% (95%CI:51.8–59.0) for the visually impaired. Individuals with congenital physical impairment— with or without limitations—presented the strongest association with the poorest SRH status. Participants with non-limiting, congenital hearing impairment showed a protective factor to poor SRH (PR=0.40 95%CI: 0.38–0.52). Individuals with acquired visual impairment with limitations demonstrated the strongest association with poor SRH (PR=1.48 95%CI:1.47–1.49). Among the impaired population, middle-aged participants showed a stronger association with poor SRH than older adult participants. Conclusions Impairment is associated with poor SRH status, especially among people with physical impairment. The origin and degree of limitation of each type of impairment differently impacts SRH among the impaired population.application/pdfengBMC Public Health. London : BioMed Central, 2001-. Vol. 23 (Mar. 2023), 580, 1-9 p.Saúde da pessoa com deficiênciaAutoavaliaçãoPessoas com deficiênciaBrasilImpaired personsSelf-assessmentHealth surveysEpidemiologyAssociation between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitationEstrangeiroinfo:eu-repo/semantics/articleinfo:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersioninfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessreponame:Repositório Institucional da UFRGSinstname:Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)instacron:UFRGSTEXT001166009.pdf.txt001166009.pdf.txtExtracted Texttext/plain50039http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/257685/2/001166009.pdf.txtd262c9658137a8c4834548cd93bd8814MD52ORIGINAL001166009.pdfTexto completo (inglês)application/pdf1108904http://www.lume.ufrgs.br/bitstream/10183/257685/1/001166009.pdf76703154c2169d7f98574e1893230e65MD5110183/2576852024-02-02 06:07:04.534061oai:www.lume.ufrgs.br:10183/257685Repositório de PublicaçõesPUBhttps://lume.ufrgs.br/oai/requestopendoar:2024-02-02T08:07:04Repositório Institucional da UFRGS - Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS)false
dc.title.pt_BR.fl_str_mv Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
title Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
spellingShingle Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
Anderle, Paula
Saúde da pessoa com deficiência
Autoavaliação
Pessoas com deficiência
Brasil
Impaired persons
Self-assessment
Health surveys
Epidemiology
title_short Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
title_full Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
title_fullStr Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
title_full_unstemmed Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
title_sort Association between impairment and self-rated heath : a brazilian population study considering type, origin, and degree of limitation
author Anderle, Paula
author_facet Anderle, Paula
Ziegelmann, Patricia Klarmann
Goulart, Bárbara Niegia Garcia de
author_role author
author2 Ziegelmann, Patricia Klarmann
Goulart, Bárbara Niegia Garcia de
author2_role author
author
dc.contributor.author.fl_str_mv Anderle, Paula
Ziegelmann, Patricia Klarmann
Goulart, Bárbara Niegia Garcia de
dc.subject.por.fl_str_mv Saúde da pessoa com deficiência
Autoavaliação
Pessoas com deficiência
Brasil
topic Saúde da pessoa com deficiência
Autoavaliação
Pessoas com deficiência
Brasil
Impaired persons
Self-assessment
Health surveys
Epidemiology
dc.subject.eng.fl_str_mv Impaired persons
Self-assessment
Health surveys
Epidemiology
description Background Perceived health is a well-known, low-cost measure in public health, and has been used in several studies on individuals with impairment. Although many studies have related impairment to self-rated health (SRH), few have considered the origin and degree of limitation of the impairment. This study examined whether physical, hearing, or visual impairments—when analyzed according to origin (congenital or acquired) and degree of limitation (with or without)—are associated with the SRH status. Methods This cross-sectional study used data of 43,681 adult individuals from the Brazilian National Health Survey (NHS, 2013). The outcome SRH was dichotomized into poor (including the regular, poor, and very poor responses) or good (including the good and very good responses). Crude and adjusted (for socio-demographic characteristics and chronic diseases history) prevalence ratios (PR) estimates were evaluated using Poisson regression models with the robust variance estimator. Results Poor SRH prevalence was estimated at 31.8% (95%CI:31.0–33.0) among the non-impaired population, 65.6% (95%CI:60.6–70.0) among individuals with physical impairment, 50.3% (95%CI:45.0–56.0) for people with hearing impairment, and 55.3% (95%CI:51.8–59.0) for the visually impaired. Individuals with congenital physical impairment— with or without limitations—presented the strongest association with the poorest SRH status. Participants with non-limiting, congenital hearing impairment showed a protective factor to poor SRH (PR=0.40 95%CI: 0.38–0.52). Individuals with acquired visual impairment with limitations demonstrated the strongest association with poor SRH (PR=1.48 95%CI:1.47–1.49). Among the impaired population, middle-aged participants showed a stronger association with poor SRH than older adult participants. Conclusions Impairment is associated with poor SRH status, especially among people with physical impairment. The origin and degree of limitation of each type of impairment differently impacts SRH among the impaired population.
publishDate 2023
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dc.relation.ispartof.pt_BR.fl_str_mv BMC Public Health. London : BioMed Central, 2001-. Vol. 23 (Mar. 2023), 580, 1-9 p.
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