The effects of socioeconomic and geographic factors on chronic phase long-term survival after stroke in South Korea

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作者
Dougho Park
Su Yun Lee
Eunhwan Jeong
Daeyoung Hong
Mun-Chul Kim
Jun Hwa Choi
Eun Kyong Shin
Kang Ju Son
Hyoung Seop Kim
机构
[1] Pohang Stroke and Spine Hospital,Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Brain and Vascular Center
[2] Pohang Stroke and Spine Hospital,Department of Neurology, Brain and Vascular Center
[3] Pohang Stroke and Spine Hospital,Department of Neurosurgery, Brain and Vascular Center
[4] Pohang Stroke and Spine Hospital,Department of Quality Improvement
[5] Korea University,Department of Sociology
[6] National Health Insurance Service Ilsan Hospital,Department of Research and Analysis
[7] Yonsei University Graduate School,Department of Biostatistics and Computing
[8] National Health Insurance Service Ilsan Hospital,Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation
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摘要
The stroke incidence has increased rapidly in South Korea, calling for a national-wide system for long-term stroke management. We investigated the effects of socioeconomic status (SES) and geographic factors on chronic phase survival after stroke. We retrospectively enrolled 6994 patients who experienced a stroke event in 2009 from the Korean National Health Insurance database. We followed them up from 24 to 120 months after stroke onset. The endpoint was all-cause mortality. We defined SES using a medical-aid group and four groups divided by health insurance premium quartiles. Geographic factors were defined using Model 1 (capital, metropolitan, city, and county) and Model 2 (with or without university hospitals). The higher the insurance premium, the higher the survival rate tended to be (P < 0.001). The patient survival rate was highest in the capital city and lowest at the county level (P < 0.001). Regions with a university hospital(s) showed a higher survival rate (P = 0.006). Cox regression revealed that the medical-aid group was identified as an independent risk factor for chronic phase mortality. Further, NHIP level had a more significant effect than geographic factors on chronic stroke mortality. From these results, long-term nationwide efforts to reduce inter-regional as well as SES discrepancies affecting stroke management are needed.
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