Boynton-Jarrett Renée, Ryan Louise M, Berkman Lisa F, Wright Rosalind J
Division of General Pediatrics, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Nov;122(5):961-70. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-3063.
The goal was to determine whether cumulative exposure to violence in childhood and adolescence contributes to disparities in self-rated health among a nationally representative sample of US adolescents.
The National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 is an ongoing, 8-year (1997-2004), longitudinal, cohort study of youths who were 12 to 18 years of age at baseline (N = 8224). Generalized estimating equations were constructed to investigate the relationship between cumulative exposure to violence and risk for poor health.
At baseline, 75% of subjects reported excellent or very good health, 21.5% reported good health, and 4.5% reported fair or poor health. Cumulative violence exposures (witnessed gun violence, threat of violence, repeated bullying, perceived safety, and criminal victimization) were associated with a graded increase in risk for poor health and reduced the strength of the relationship between household income and poor health. In comparison with subjects with no violence exposure, risk for poor self-rated health was 4.6 times greater among subjects who reported >or=5 forms of cumulative exposure to violence, controlling for demographic features and household income. Trend analysis revealed that, for each additional violence exposure, the risk of poor health increased by 38%. Adjustment for alcohol use, drug use, smoking, depressive symptoms, and family and neighborhood environment reduced the strength of the relationships between household income and cumulative exposure to violence scores and poor self-rated health, which suggests partial mediation of the effects of socioeconomic status and cumulative exposure to violence by these factors.
In this nationally representative sample, social inequality in risk for poor self-rated health during the transition from adolescence to adulthood was partially attributable to disparities in cumulative exposure to violence. A strong graded association was noted between cumulative exposure to violence and poor self-rated health in adolescence and young adulthood.
本研究旨在确定童年和青少年时期累积遭受暴力是否会导致美国青少年全国代表性样本中自评健康状况的差异。
1997年全国青少年纵向调查是一项正在进行的为期8年(1997 - 2004年)的纵向队列研究,研究对象为基线时年龄在12至18岁的青少年(N = 8224)。构建广义估计方程以研究累积暴力暴露与健康状况不佳风险之间的关系。
在基线时,75%的受试者报告健康状况极佳或非常好,21.5%报告健康状况良好,4.5%报告健康状况一般或较差。累积暴力暴露(目睹枪支暴力、暴力威胁、反复欺凌、感知安全和犯罪受害)与健康状况不佳风险的分级增加相关,并削弱了家庭收入与健康状况不佳之间的关系强度。与未遭受暴力暴露的受试者相比,报告有≥5种累积暴力暴露形式的受试者自评健康状况不佳的风险高出4.6倍,同时对人口统计学特征和家庭收入进行了控制。趋势分析显示,每增加一次暴力暴露,健康状况不佳的风险增加38%。对饮酒、吸毒、吸烟、抑郁症状以及家庭和邻里环境进行调整后,家庭收入与累积暴力暴露得分以及自评健康状况不佳之间关系的强度降低,这表明社会经济地位和累积暴力暴露的影响在一定程度上通过这些因素起到了中介作用。
在这个全国代表性样本中,从青少年到成年期自评健康状况不佳风险的社会不平等部分归因于累积暴力暴露的差异。在青少年和青年成年期,累积暴力暴露与自评健康状况不佳之间存在强烈的分级关联。