Helmholtz Zentrum München, German Research Centre for Environmental Health, Institute of Health Economics and Health Care Management, Neuherberg, Germany.
BMC Public Health. 2010 Apr 21;10:199. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-10-199.
Children with a low socioeconomic position are more affected by mental difficulties as compared to children with a higher socioeconomic position. This paper explores whether this socioeconomic pattern persists in the prosperous German city of Munich which features high quality of life and coverage of children mental health specialists that lies well above the national average and is among the highest in Europe.
1,265 parents of preschool children participated in a cross-sectional health survey. They were given a self-administered questionnaire (including socioeconomic variables) and the 'Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ)', a well-established method to identify mental difficulties among children and adolescents. Prevalence estimates for the 'SDQ-Total Difficulties Score' were calculated, with a special focus on differences by parental (resp. household) socioeconomic position. The association between parental education, household income, single parenthood, nationality, and parental working status on one hand, and their children's mental health on the other, was explored using multivariable logistic regression models. The coverage of mental health specialists per 100,000 children aged 14 or younger in the city of Munich was also calculated.
In Munich, the distribution of mental health difficulties among children follows the same socioeconomic pattern as described previously at the national level, but the overall prevalence is about 30% lower. Comparing different indicators of socioeconomic position, low parental education and household income are the strongest independent variables associated with mental difficulties among children (OR = 2.7; CI = 1.6 - 4.4 and OR = 2.8; CI = 1.4 - 5.6, respectively).
Socioeconomic differences in the prevalence of childhood mental difficulties are very stable. Even in a city such as Munich, which is characterized by high quality of life, high availability of mental health specialists, and low overall prevalence of these mental difficulties, they are about as pronounced as in Germany as a whole. It can be concluded that the effect of several characteristics of socioeconomic position 'overrules' the effect of a health promoting regional environment.
与社会经济地位较高的儿童相比,社会经济地位较低的儿童更容易受到精神困难的影响。本文探讨了这种社会经济模式是否在德国慕尼黑市这样一个繁荣的城市中存在,慕尼黑市生活质量高,儿童心理健康专家的覆盖率远高于全国平均水平,在欧洲也处于较高水平。
1265 名学龄前儿童的家长参与了一项横断面健康调查。他们填写了一份自我管理问卷(包括社会经济变量)和“长处和困难问卷(SDQ)”,这是一种识别儿童和青少年精神困难的成熟方法。计算了“SDQ-总困难得分”的患病率估计值,特别关注父母(或家庭)社会经济地位差异。利用多变量逻辑回归模型探讨了父母教育、家庭收入、单亲家庭、国籍和父母工作状况与儿童心理健康之间的关系。还计算了慕尼黑市每 10 万名 14 岁以下儿童的心理健康专家覆盖率。
在慕尼黑,儿童的心理健康困难分布与全国水平描述的社会经济模式相同,但总体患病率低约 30%。比较不同的社会经济地位指标,父母教育程度低和家庭收入低是与儿童精神困难最相关的独立变量(OR=2.7;95%CI=1.6-4.4 和 OR=2.8;95%CI=1.4-5.6)。
儿童精神困难患病率的社会经济差异非常稳定。即使在像慕尼黑这样一个以生活质量高、心理健康专家可用性高、这些精神困难总体患病率低为特征的城市,其程度也与德国全国水平相当。可以得出结论,社会经济地位的几个特征的影响“超过”了促进健康的区域环境的影响。