Department of Neuroscience, Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Uppsala University, 751 85, Uppsala, Sweden.
Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol. 2012 Oct;47(10):1695-706. doi: 10.1007/s00127-012-0476-y. Epub 2012 Jan 18.
Both "social causation" and "social selection" offer plausible explanations for an association between education and mental health. We aimed to explore these processes in unipolar depression, with a specific focus on school performance and family tradition of education.
Grandchildren (N = 28,089, 49% female, aged 13-47 years in 2002) of a cohort born in Uppsala, Sweden, in 1915-1929 were studied in national registers. We obtained data on final grade point average (GPA) in compulsory school, hospitalizations for unipolar depression, grandparental/parental education and other parental social characteristics. Hospitalization in adolescence and adulthood were studied separately, as were hospitalization for depression with or without a lifetime externalizing disorder.
Low compulsory school GPA (1-2 SD or >2 SD below average vs. average GPA) was associated with increased rate of adolescent hospitalization for unipolar depression, both with externalizing comorbidity [hazard ratio (HR) point estimates of 66-80] and without (HR point estimates of 4-6). By contrast, low GPA was only associated with first-time hospitalization in adulthood for the subgroup with externalizing comorbidity (HR point estimates of 4-6). These associations were largely independent of family education and social characteristics. Overall, low parental/grandparental education was not related to increased rates of hospitalization.
The association between school performance and hospitalization for depression depended on adolescent hospitalization or externalizing comorbidity, suggesting that disorders with an early onset are decisive. Contrary to the social patterning of many health outcomes, low grandparental/parental education did not appear to increase the rate of hospitalization for unipolar depression in the offspring.
“社会因果关系”和“社会选择”都为教育与心理健康之间的关联提供了合理的解释。我们旨在探讨这些过程在单相抑郁中的作用,特别关注学校表现和家庭教育传统。
在全国登记册中,我们研究了 1915 年至 1929 年在瑞典乌普萨拉出生的一个队列的孙辈(N=28089,49%为女性,2002 年时年龄在 13-47 岁之间)。我们获得了义务教育阶段最后平均绩点(GPA)、单相抑郁住院、祖辈/父母教育和其他父母社会特征的数据。分别研究了青少年和成年期的住院情况,以及伴有或不伴有终生外化障碍的抑郁住院情况。
义务教育阶段 GPA 较低(1-2 个标准差或低于平均 GPA 2 个标准差以上与平均 GPA 相比)与青少年单相抑郁住院率增加相关,同时伴有或不伴有外化共病(危险比[HR]点估计值为 66-80)。相比之下,仅伴有外化共病的亚组中,低 GPA 与成年后首次住院相关(HR 点估计值为 4-6)。这些关联在很大程度上独立于家庭教育和社会特征。总的来说,父母/祖辈教育程度较低与住院率增加无关。
学校表现与抑郁住院之间的关联取决于青少年住院或外化共病,表明早期发病的疾病是决定性的。与许多健康结果的社会模式相反,祖辈/父母教育程度较低似乎不会增加子女单相抑郁的住院率。