Office of Population Research, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ, USA.
Glob Public Health. 2010;5(4):413-26. doi: 10.1080/17441690902756062.
Socioeconomic status is generally associated with better health, but recent evidence suggests that this 'social gradient' in health is far from universal. This study examines whether social gradients in smoking and obesity in Mexico - a country in the midst of rapid socioeconomic change - conform to or diverge from results for richer countries. Using a nationally representative sample of 39,129 Mexican adults, we calculate the odds of smoking and of being obese by educational attainment and by household wealth. We conclude that socioeconomic determinants of smoking and obesity in Mexico are complex, with some flat gradients and some strong positive or negative gradients. Higher social status (education and assets) is associated with more smoking and less obesity for urban women. Higher status rural women also smoke more, but obesity for these women has a non-linear relationship to education. For urban men, higher asset levels (but not education) are associated with obesity, whereas education is protective of smoking. Higher status rural men with more assets are more likely to smoke and be obese. As household wealth, education and urbanisation continue to increase in Mexico, these patterns suggest potential targets for public health intervention now and in the future.
社会经济地位通常与更好的健康状况相关,但最近的证据表明,这种健康方面的“社会梯度”并非普遍存在。本研究考察了墨西哥——一个正在经历快速社会经济变革的国家——的吸烟和肥胖方面的社会阶层差异是否符合或偏离了富裕国家的结果。我们使用了一个具有全国代表性的 39129 名墨西哥成年人样本,根据教育程度和家庭财富计算了吸烟和肥胖的几率。我们的结论是,墨西哥吸烟和肥胖的社会经济决定因素是复杂的,有些呈平坦梯度,有些则呈强烈的正或负梯度。较高的社会地位(教育和资产)与城市女性的吸烟量增加和肥胖减少有关。较高社会地位的农村女性吸烟也较多,但这些女性的肥胖与教育呈非线性关系。对于城市男性来说,较高的资产水平(而不是教育)与肥胖有关,而教育则对吸烟有保护作用。拥有更多资产的较高社会地位的农村男性更有可能吸烟和肥胖。随着墨西哥的家庭财富、教育和城市化水平继续提高,这些模式表明现在和未来都有潜在的公共卫生干预目标。