Publication:
Association between individual and country-level socioeconomic factors and work participation in spondyloarthritis including psoriatic arthritis: Analysis of the ASAS-perSpA study.

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Date

2021-06-09

Authors

Zhao, Sizheng Steven
Nikiphorou, Elena
Boonen, Annelies
Lopez-Medina, Clementina
Dougados, Maxime
Ramiro, Sofia

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Elsevier
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Abstract

To examine whether associations between socioeconomic factors and work outcomes in spondyloarthritis (SpA) differ across axial (axSpA), peripheral SpA (pSpA) and psoriatic arthritis (PsA), and whether associations for individual-level socioeconomic factors are modified by country-level factors. Patients with a physician diagnosis of SpA within working age (18-65 years) were included. Associations between individual- (age, gender, education, marital status) and country-level factors (Human Development Index, Health Care Expenditure (HCE), Gross Domestic Product, percentage unemployed) with work outcomes (employment status, absenteeism, presenteeism) were assessed using multivariable mixed-effects models. Associations between individual factors and outcomes were compared according to SpA phenotypes and country-level factors using interaction terms. A total of 3835 patients (mean age 42 years, 61% males) from 23 countries worldwide were included (66% axSpA, 10% pSpA, 23% PsA). Being employed was associated with gender (male vs. female OR 2.5; 95%CI 1.9-3.2), education (university vs. primary OR 3.7; 2.9-4.7), marital status (married vs. single OR 1.3; 1.04-1.6), and age in a non-linear manner. University (vs primary) education was associated with lower odds of absenteeism (OR 0.7; 0.5-0.96) and presenteeism (OR 0.5; 0.3-0.7). Associations were similar across SpA phenotypes. Higher HCE was associated with more favourable work outcomes, e.g., higher odds of employment (OR 2.5; 1.5-4.1). Gender discrepancy in odds of employment was greater in countries with lower socioeconomic development. Higher educational attainment and higher HCE were associated with more favourable work outcomes, independently of SpA phenotype. The disadvantageous effect of female gender on employment is particularly strong in countries with lower socioeconomic development.

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MeSH Terms

Absenteeism
Adolescent
Adult
Aged
Arthritis, psoriatic
Cross-sectional studies
Female
Humans
Male
Middle aged
Socioeconomic factors
Spondylarthritis
Young adult

DeCS Terms

Absentismo
Artritis psoriásica
Espondiloartritis
Factores socioeconómicos
Persona de mediana edad

CIE Terms

Keywords

Education, Healthcare expenditure, Psoriatic arthritis, Socioeconomic factors, Spondyloarthritis, Work participation

Citation

Zhao SS, Nikiphorou E, Boonen A, López-Medina C, Dougados M, Ramiro S. Association between individual and country-level socioeconomic factors and work participation in spondyloarthritis including psoriatic arthritis: Analysis of the ASAS-perSpA study. Semin Arthritis Rheum. 2021 Aug;51(4):804-812