Palloni Alberto, Milesi Carolina, White Robert G, Turner Alyn
Northwestern University, USA.
Soc Sci Med. 2009 May;68(9):1574-82. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2009.02.009. Epub 2009 Mar 9.
The persistence of adult health and mortality socioeconomic inequalities and the equally stubborn reproduction of social class inequalities are salient features in modern societies that puzzle researchers in seemingly unconnected research fields. Neither can be satisfactorily explained with standard theoretical frameworks. In the domain of health and mortality, it is unclear if and to what an extent adult health and mortality disparities across socioeconomic status (SES) are the product of attributes of the positions themselves, the partial result of health conditions established earlier in life that influence both adult health and economic success, or the outcome of the reverse impact of health status on SES. In the domain of social stratification, the transmission of inequalities across generations has been remarkably resistant to satisfactory explanations. Although the literature on social stratification is by and large silent about the role played by early health status in shaping adult socioeconomic opportunities, new research on human capital formation suggests this is a serious error of omission. In this paper we propose to investigate the connections between these two domains. We use data from male respondents of the 1958 British Cohort to estimate (a) the influence of early health conditions on adult SES and (b) the contribution of early health status to observed adult health differentials. The model incorporates early conditions as determinants of traits that enhance (inhibit) social mobility and also conventional and unconventional factors that affect adult health and socioeconomic status. Our findings reveal that early childhood health plays a small, but non-trivial role as a determinant of adult SES and the adult socioeconomic gradient in health. These findings enrich current explanations of SES inequalities and of adult health and mortality disparities.
成人健康与死亡率方面社会经济不平等现象的持续存在,以及社会阶层不平等同样顽固的再现,是现代社会的显著特征,这让看似互不相关的研究领域的研究者们感到困惑。这两者都无法用标准的理论框架得到令人满意的解释。在健康与死亡率领域,尚不清楚社会经济地位(SES)不同的成年人在健康与死亡率方面的差异,在多大程度上是这些地位本身属性的产物,是早年确立的健康状况对成人健康和经济成就产生双重影响的部分结果,还是健康状况对社会经济地位产生反向影响的结果。在社会分层领域,不平等在代际间的传递一直非常难以得到令人满意的解释。尽管关于社会分层的文献总体上对早年健康状况在塑造成人社会经济机会中所起的作用未作探讨,但关于人力资本形成的新研究表明,这是一个严重的疏漏。在本文中,我们提议研究这两个领域之间的联系。我们使用1958年英国队列男性受访者的数据来估计:(a)早年健康状况对成人社会经济地位的影响,以及(b)早年健康状况对观察到的成人健康差异的贡献。该模型将早年状况纳入考量,作为增强(抑制)社会流动性的特质的决定因素,以及影响成人健康和社会经济地位的传统和非传统因素。我们的研究结果表明,幼儿健康作为成人社会经济地位和成人健康社会经济梯度的一个决定因素,发挥着虽小但并非微不足道的作用。这些研究结果丰富了当前对社会经济地位不平等以及成人健康与死亡率差异的解释。