Lager A, Bremberg S, Vågerö D
Centre for Health Equity Studies (CHESS), Stockholm University/Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.
BMJ. 2009 Dec 10;339:b5282. doi: 10.1136/bmj.b5282.
To establish whether differences in early IQ explain why people with longer education live longer, or whether differences in father's or own educational attainment explain why people with higher early IQ live longer.
Population based longitudinal study. Mortality risks were estimated with Cox proportional hazards regressions.
Malmö, Sweden.
1530 children who took IQ tests at age 10 and were followed up until age 75.
Own educational attainment was negatively associated with all cause mortality in both sexes, even when early IQ and father's education were adjusted for (hazard ratio (HR) for each additional year in school 0.91 (95% CI 0.85 to 0.97) for men and HR 0.88 (95 % CI 0.78 to 0.98) for women). Higher early IQ was linked with a reduced mortality risk in men, even when own educational attainment and father's education were adjusted for (HR for one standard deviation increase in IQ 0.85 (95 % CI 0.75 to 0.96)). In contrast, there was no crude effect of early IQ for women, and women with above average IQ had an increased mortality risk when own educational attainment was adjusted for, but only after the age of 60 (HR 1.60 (95 % CI 1.06 to 2.42)). Adding measures of social career over and above educational attainment to the model (for example, occupational status at age 36 and number of children) only marginally affected the hazard ratio for women with above average IQ (<5%).
Mortality differences by own educational attainment were not explained by early IQ. Childhood IQ was independently linked, albeit differently, to male adult mortality and to female adult mortality even when father's education and own educational attainment was adjusted for, thus social background and own social career seem unlikely to be responsible for mortality differences by childhood IQ. The clear difference in the effect of IQ between men and women suggests that the link between IQ and mortality involves the social and physical environment rather than simply being a marker of a healthy body to begin with. Cognitive skills should, therefore, be addressed in our efforts to create childhood environments that promote health.
确定早期智商的差异是否能解释受教育时间较长的人寿命更长的原因,或者父亲或自身教育程度的差异是否能解释早期智商较高的人寿命更长的原因。
基于人群的纵向研究。采用Cox比例风险回归估计死亡风险。
瑞典马尔默。
1530名儿童,他们在10岁时接受了智商测试,并随访至75岁。
即使在对早期智商和父亲的教育程度进行调整后,自身教育程度与两性的全因死亡率均呈负相关(男性每多接受一年教育的风险比(HR)为0.91(95%可信区间0.85至0.97),女性为HR 0.88(95%可信区间0.78至0.98))。即使在对自身教育程度和父亲的教育程度进行调整后,较高的早期智商与男性死亡率风险降低有关(智商每增加一个标准差的HR为0.85(95%可信区间0.75至0.96))。相比之下,早期智商对女性没有明显影响,在对自身教育程度进行调整后,智商高于平均水平的女性死亡率风险增加,但仅在60岁以后(HR 1.60(95%可信区间1.06至2.42))。在模型中加入教育程度之外的社会职业指标(例如,36岁时的职业地位和子女数量),对智商高于平均水平的女性的风险比影响甚微(<5%)。
早期智商并不能解释自身教育程度导致的死亡率差异。即使在对父亲的教育程度和自身教育程度进行调整后,儿童期智商与男性和女性成人死亡率均独立相关,尽管方式不同,因此社会背景和自身社会职业似乎不太可能是儿童期智商导致死亡率差异的原因。男性和女性在智商影响方面的明显差异表明智商与死亡率之间的联系涉及社会和物理环境,而不仅仅是一开始健康身体的标志。因此,在我们努力创造促进健康的儿童环境时,应该关注认知技能。