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J Epidemiol Community Health doi:10.1136/jech.2008.084954
  • Research report

Socioeconomic Variations in the Prevalence and Incidence of Parkinson’s Disease: A Population-Based Analysis

  1. Lisa M Lix1,
  2. Douglas E Hobson2,
  3. Mahmoud Azimaee2,
  4. William D Leslie2,
  5. Charles Burchill2,
  6. Shaun Hobson2
  1. 1 University of Saskatchewan, Canada;
  2. 2 University of Manitoba, Canada
  1. * Corresponding author; email: lisa.lix{at}usask.ca
  • Received 19 November 2008
  • Accepted 31 May 2009
  • Published Online First 13 August 2009

Abstract

Background: For many chronic conditions, lower socioeconomic status is associated with higher rates of disease. Previous research has not investigated whether this inverse relationship exists for Parkinson’s disease (PD). The purpose was to investigate the association between socioeconomic status and prevalence and incidence of PD.

Methods: The study was conducted using population-based administrative data from Manitoba, Canada. PD cases were identified from diagnoses in hospital and physician records. Area-level census data on average household income and residential postal codes in health insurance registration files were used to assign PD cases to urban and rural income quintiles. Annual adjusted prevalence and incidence estimates were calculated for fiscal years 1987/88 to 2006/07. Hypotheses about differences between quintiles in average estimates and average rates of change were tested using generalized linear models with generalized estimating equations.

Results: The estimated prevalence of PD increased over the twenty-year period but incidence remained unchanged. In urban regions, average prevalence and incidence estimates were significantly higher for the lowest income quintile than the highest quintile. In rural regions, average prevalence estimates were significant higher for the lowest quintile than for the highest quintile but incidence estimates were not significantly different. The annual rate of increase in the PD prevalence was significantly different for the lowest urban and rural income quintiles.

Conclusions: There is a greater burden of PD in low income areas. An understanding of socioeconomic inequalities is useful when formulating hypotheses about factors associated with disease onset and developing equity-oriented policies about access to healthcare resources.

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