Pulkki Laura, Kivimäki Mika, Keltikangas-Järvinen Liisa, Elovainio Marko, Leino Marketta, Viikari Jorma
Department of Psychology, Division of Applied Psychology, University of Helsinki, PO Box 9, FIN-00014 University of Helsinki, Finland.
Int J Epidemiol. 2003 Dec;32(6):968-75. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyg097.
The role of early personality in socioeconomic inequalities in health is not well understood. We investigated the extent to which type A components in adolescence and early adulthood contributed to the inverse association between education and behavioural cardiovascular disease risk factors in adulthood.
Prospective cohort study with a population-based random sample of 477 men and 648 women, aged 12-21 years at baseline. Baseline data included information on pathogenic and protective components of type A behaviours (impatience, aggression, hard-driving, and engagement-involvement) and parental education. The 9-year follow-up data included information on the participant's educational level and health behaviours (smoking, alcohol consumption, physical inactivity, butter use).
After adjustment for parental education, high levels of impatience and low levels of hard-driving in adolescence and early adulthood predicted low educational level in adulthood (Ps < 0.01 for men, Ps < 0.001 for women). Adulthood education was inversely associated with smoking in women and men (odds ratios [OR] = 8.5 and 7.9, 95% CI: 3.4-18.4 and 3.1-23.9, respectively), and with physical inactivity in women (OR = 5.4, 95% CI: 2.6-11.4). In men, components of type A behaviour explained 28.5% of the inverse association between education and smoking, even after controlling for parental education. In women, the corresponding proportions were 20.5% and 17.7% for smoking and physical inactivity, respectively.
The inverse associations of adulthood education with smoking in men and women and physical inactivity in women may be partly rooted in personality-related factors present earlier in life. Our evidence suggests that personality should be studied as a potential contributor to socioeconomic differences in health behaviours.
早期人格在健康方面的社会经济不平等中所起的作用尚未得到充分理解。我们调查了青少年期和成年早期的A型行为成分在多大程度上导致了成年期教育与行为性心血管疾病风险因素之间的负相关。
对477名男性和648名女性进行基于人群的随机抽样前瞻性队列研究,基线时年龄为12 - 21岁。基线数据包括A型行为的致病和保护成分(不耐烦、攻击性、拼命工作和参与投入)以及父母教育程度的信息。9年随访数据包括参与者的教育水平和健康行为(吸烟、饮酒、缺乏体育活动、使用黄油)的信息。
在调整父母教育程度后,青少年期和成年早期的高度不耐烦和低度拼命工作预示着成年期的低教育水平(男性P < 0.01,女性P < 0.001)。成年期教育与男性和女性的吸烟呈负相关(优势比[OR]分别为8.5和7.9,95%可信区间:3.4 - 18.4和3.1 - 23.9),与女性的缺乏体育活动呈负相关(OR = 5.4,95%可信区间:2.6 - 11.4)。在男性中,即使在控制了父母教育程度之后,A型行为成分也解释了教育与吸烟之间负相关的28.5%。在女性中,吸烟和缺乏体育活动的相应比例分别为20.5%和17.7%。
成年期教育与男性吸烟、女性吸烟以及女性缺乏体育活动之间的负相关可能部分源于生命早期存在的与人格相关的因素。我们的证据表明,人格应作为健康行为社会经济差异的潜在促成因素进行研究。