Department of Occupational and Environmental Epidemiology, Bavarian Health and Food Safety Authority, Munich, Germany.
Eur J Public Health. 2013 Jun;23(3):469-75. doi: 10.1093/eurpub/cks062. Epub 2012 Jun 8.
Adverse effects of single parenthood on children's health have been reported before. Socio-economic difficulties are discussed as mediating factors. As child health also depends on environmental conditions, we investigated the impact of environmental exposures and socio-economic factors on differences in health outcomes of children with single mothers vs. couple families.
Data on 17,218 pre-school children (47% female) from three cross-sectional surveys conducted during 2004-07 in Germany were analysed. Health and exposure assessment were primarily based on parental report. Effects of socio-economic indicators (maternal education, household income) and environmental factors (traffic load at the place of residence, perceived environmental quality) on associations of four health outcomes (parent-reported health status, asthma, overweight, psychological problems) with single parenthood were determined by logistic regression analyses.
Children with single mothers showed an increased risk regarding parent-reported poor health status [boys: odds ratio (OR) 1.39 (95% confidence interval (CI): 1.06-1.82), girls: 1.73 (1.28-2.33)], psychological problems [boys: 1.90 (1.38-2.61), girls: 1.58 (1.03-2.42)], overweight [only boys: OR 1.23 (1.01-1.50) and asthma [only girls: OR 1.90 (1.15-3.15)]. Adjusting for socio-economic factors attenuated the strength of the association of family type with child health. Although environmental factors were associated with most health outcomes investigated and children of single mothers were more often exposed, these environmental factors did not alter the differences between children with single mothers and couple families.
The increased health risks of children from single-mother families vs. couple families are partly explained by socio-economic factors, but not by the environmental exposures studied.
先前已有报道表明单亲家庭对儿童健康的不良影响。社会经济困难被认为是其中的中介因素。由于儿童健康也取决于环境条件,我们研究了环境暴露和社会经济因素对单亲家庭和双亲家庭儿童健康结果差异的影响。
对 2004-07 年期间在德国进行的三项横断面研究中的 17218 名学龄前儿童(47%为女性)的数据进行了分析。健康和暴露评估主要基于父母报告。通过逻辑回归分析,确定了社会经济指标(母亲教育程度、家庭收入)和环境因素(居住地交通负荷、感知环境质量)对四个健康结果(父母报告的健康状况、哮喘、超重、心理问题)与单亲家庭关联的影响。
与双亲家庭儿童相比,单亲家庭的儿童报告健康状况不佳的风险增加[男孩:比值比(OR)为 1.39(95%置信区间(CI):1.06-1.82),女孩:1.73(1.28-2.33)]、心理问题[男孩:1.90(1.38-2.61),女孩:1.58(1.03-2.42)]、超重[仅男孩:OR 为 1.23(1.01-1.50)和哮喘[仅女孩:OR 为 1.90(1.15-3.15)]。调整社会经济因素后,家庭类型与儿童健康之间的关联强度减弱。尽管环境因素与研究中大多数健康结果相关,而且单亲家庭的儿童更容易受到影响,但这些环境因素并没有改变单亲家庭和双亲家庭儿童之间的差异。
单亲家庭儿童相对于双亲家庭儿童的健康风险增加部分可以用社会经济因素来解释,但不能用所研究的环境暴露来解释。