The importance of socio-economic determinants of health in the care of patients with peripheral artery disease: A narrative review from VAS

Author:

Kolossváry Endre1234ORCID,Farkas Katalin1234ORCID,Karahan Oguz1235,Golledge Jonathan1236ORCID,Schernthaner Gerit-Holger1237,Karplus Thomas1238,Bernardo Jonathan James1239,Marschang Sascha12310,Abola Maria Teresa12311ORCID,Heinzmann Monica12312,Edmonds Michael12313,Catalano Mariella12314

Affiliation:

1. VAS-European Independent Foundation in Angiology/Vascular Medicine

2. VAS-International Consortium – International PAD Strategic Network

3. Inter-University Research Center on Vascular Disease, Department Biomedical and Clinical Science, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

4. Department of Angiology, St Imre University Teaching Hospital, Budapest, Hungary

5. Department of Cardiovascular Surgery, Medical School of Alaaddin Keykubat University, Alanya/Antalya, Diyarbakir, Turkey

6. James Cook University & Townsville University Hospital, Townsville, QLD, Australia

7. Department of Internal Medicine II, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria

8. Department of Vascular Medicine, Concord Repatriation General Hospital, Sydney, NSW, Australia

9. Department of Vascular Medicine, St Luke’s Medical Center, Quezon, NCR, Philippines

10. Department Managing Committee, VAS-European Independent Foundation in Angiology/Vascular Medicine, Bruxelles, Belgium

11. University of the Philippines College of Medicine–Philippine, Philippine Heart Center, Quezon, Philippines

12. Angiology Unit, Allende Sanatorium, Nueva, Cordóba, Argentina

13. King’s College Hospital, Diabetic Foot Clinic, London, UK

14. Department of Biomedical and Clinical Sciences L Sacco Hospital, Inter-University Research Center on Vascular Disease, University of Milan, Milan, Italy

Abstract

Socio-economic determinants of health (SDoH) include various nonmedical factors in the socio-economic sphere with a potentially significant impact on health outcomes. Their effects manifest through several mediators/moderators (behavioral characteristics, physical environment, psychosocial circumstances, access to care, and biological factors). Various critical covariates (age, gender/sex, race/ethnicity, culture/acculturation, and disability status) also interact. Analyzing the effects of these factors is challenging due to their enormous complexity. Although the significance of SDoH for cardiovascular diseases is well documented, research regarding their impact on peripheral artery disease (PAD) occurrence and care is less well documented. This narrative review explores to what extent SDoH are multifaceted in PAD and how they are associated with its occurrence and care. Additionally, methodological issues that may hamper this effort are addressed. Finally, the most important question, whether this association may contribute to reasonable interventions aimed at SDoH, is analyzed. This endeavor requires attention to the social context, a whole systems approach, multilevel-thinking, and a broader alliance that reaches out to more stakeholders outside the medical sphere. More research is needed to justify the power in this concept to improve PAD-related outcomes like lower extremity amputations. At the present time, some evidence, reasonable consideration, and intuitive reasoning support the implementation of various interventions in SDoH in this field.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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