Author:
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Temam, Sofia; Varraso, Raphaëlle; Pornet, Carole; Sanchez, Margaux; Affret, Aurélie; Jacquemin, Bénédicte; Clavel-Chapelon, Françoise; Rey, Grégoire; Rican, Stéphane; Le Moual, Nicole
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Abstract:
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Background: Despite the increasing interest in place effect to explain health inequalities, there is currently no consensus
on which kind of area-based socioeconomic measures researchers should use to assess neighborhood socioeconomic
position (SEP). The study aimed to evaluate the reliability of different area-based deprivation indices (DIs) in capturing
socioeconomic residential conditions of French elderly women cohort.
Methods: We assessed area-based SEP using 3 DIs: Townsend Index, French European Deprivation Index (FEDI)
and French Deprivation index (FDep), among women from E3N (Etude épidémiologique auprès des femmes de la
Mutuelle Générale de l’Education Nationale). DIs were derived from the 2009 French census at IRIS level (smallest
geographical units in France). Educational level was used to evaluate individual-SEP. To evaluate external validity
of the 3 DIs, associations between two well-established socially patterned outcomes among French elderly women
(smoking and overweight) and SEP, were compared. Odd ratios were computed with generalized estimating equations
to control for clustering effects from participants within the same IRIS.
Results: The analysis was performed among 63,888 women (aged 64, 47% ever smokers and 30% overweight).
Substantial agreement was observed between the two French DIs (Kappa coefficient = 0.61) and between Townsend
and FEDI (0.74) and fair agreement between Townsend and FDep (0.21). As expected among French elderly women,
those with lower educational level were significantly less prone to be ever smoker (Low vs. High; OR [95% CI] = 0.43
[0.40–0.46]) and more prone to being overweight (1.89 [1.77–2.01]) than women higher educated. FDep showed
expected associations at area-level for both smoking (most deprived vs. least deprived quintile; 0.77 [0.73–0.81]) and
overweight (1.52 [1.44–1.62]). For FEDI opposite associations with smoking (1.13 [1.07–1.19]) and expected association
with overweight (1.20 [1.13–1.28]) were observed. Townsend showed opposite associations to those expected for both
smoking and overweight (1.51 [1.43–1.59]; 0.93 [0.88–0.99], respectively).
Conclusion: FDep seemed reliable to capture socioeconomic residential conditions of the E3N women, more educated
in average than general French population. Results varied strongly according to the DI with unexpected results for
some of them, which suggested the importance to test external validity before studying social disparities in health in
specific populations. |