Environmental, Social, and Health Burdens in relation to Sleep-Disordered Breathing among Patients of Community-Based Health Centers in the United States

美国社区卫生中心患者睡眠呼吸障碍相关的环境、社会和健康负担

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Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) is preventable but underdiagnosed, with disparities among sociodemographic groups with limited material and social resources, partly driven by community-level environmental and social conditions along with healthcare-related factors. OBJECTIVES: We sought to investigate associations between multifactorial community-level environmental, social, and health burdens and SDB prevalence. We also determined effect modification by age, sex, race, and ethnicity. DESIGN SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: Cross-sectional analysis of electronic health records (EHR) data collected in 2022 from 1,957,775 adult patients in the OCHIN network (>2,000 community health centers across 40 U.S. states). EXPOSURES: Patients' 2022 residential addresses were linked to a census tract-level environmental, social, and health burden (ESHB) index created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the Agency for Toxic Substances Disease Registry. The ESHB comprises 36 indicators that capture and rank community-level social (e.g., socioeconomic status), environmental (e.g., air pollution), and health (e.g., hypertension) vulnerability. Higher percentile ranks of ESHB (range: 0-1) indicated higher vulnerability. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: SDB was identified via diagnostic and procedural codes, and subtypes were categorized as obstructive (OSA), central (CSA), other/unspecified (OUSA), multiple apneas, and procedure-based cases. Log-binomial regression estimated prevalence ratios (PRs) and 95% confidence intervals (CIs), adjusting for age, sex, race, and ethnicity. We assessed effect modification by testing cross-product terms. RESULTS: Among 1,957,775 patients (median age was 43.0 years [IQR: 30.0-58.0]; 40.6% men), SDB prevalence was 5.5%, with CSA at 0.03%, OSA at 3.8%, OUSA at 1.4%, multiple sleep apneas at 0.03%, and procedure-based cases at 0.21%. Each 0.1-unit increase in ESHB percentile rank was associated with higher prevalence of SDB (PR=1.01 [1.01-1.01]), OUSA (PR=1.01 [1.01-1.02]), and procedure-based cases (PR=1.05 [1.03-1.06]). The ESHB-SDB association was elevated among adults aged 18-49 years, women, American Indian/Alaska Native and White, and non-Hispanic. ESHB was not associated with CSA. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Higher community-level environmental, social, and health vulnerabilities were associated with higher SDB prevalence (although future prospective studies are warranted). Our findings underscore the need to address community-level factors with potential tailoring of interventions across sociodemographic groups.

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