BMC Public Health (Oct 2007)

Educational disparities in health behaviors among patients with diabetes: the <it>Translating Research Into Action for Diabetes (TRIAD) Study</it>

  • Waitzfelder Beth,
  • Marrero David G,
  • Tseng Chien-Wen,
  • Beckles Gloria L,
  • Gary Tiffany L,
  • Gregg Edward W,
  • Duru O Kenrik,
  • Brown Arleen F,
  • Stevens Mark R,
  • Karter Andrew J,
  • Herman William H,
  • Piette John D,
  • Safford Monika M,
  • Ettner Susan L

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-7-308
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7, no. 1
p. 308

Abstract

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Abstract Background Our understanding of social disparities in diabetes-related health behaviors is incomplete. The purpose of this study was to determine if having less education is associated with poorer diabetes-related health behaviors. Methods This observational study was based on a cohort of 8,763 survey respondents drawn from ~180,000 patients with diabetes receiving care from 68 provider groups in ten managed care health plans across the United States. Self-reported survey data included individual educational attainment ("education") and five diabetes self-care behaviors among individuals for whom the behavior would clearly be indicated: foot exams (among those with symptoms of peripheral neuropathy or a history of foot ulcers); self-monitoring of blood glucose (SMBG; among insulin users only); smoking; exercise; and certain diabetes-related health seeking behaviors (use of diabetes health education, website, or support group in last 12 months). Predicted probabilities were modeled at each level of self-reported educational attainment using hierarchical logistic regression models with random effects for clustering within health plans. Results Patients with less education had significantly lower predicted probabilities of being a non-smoker and engaging in regular exercise and health-seeking behaviors, while SMBG and foot self-examination did not vary by education. Extensive adjustment for patient factors revealed no discernable confounding effect on the estimates or their significance, and most education-behavior relationships were similar across sex, race and other patient characteristics. The relationship between education and smoking varied significantly across age, with a strong inverse relationship in those aged 25–44, modest for those ages 45–64, but non-evident for those over 65. Intensity of disease management by the health plan and provider communication did not alter the examined education-behavior relationships. Other measures of socioeconomic position yielded similar findings. Conclusion The relationship between educational attainment and health behaviors was modest in strength for most behaviors. Over the life course, the cumulative effect of reduced practice of multiple self-care behaviors among less educated patients may play an important part in shaping the social health gradient.