Montez Jennifer Karas
Department of Sociology, Case Western Reserve University, 223D Mather Memorial Building, Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Adv Life Course Res. 2013 Dec;18(4):244-56. doi: 10.1016/j.alcr.2013.08.001. Epub 2013 Aug 16.
Mounting evidence finds that adult health reflects socioeconomic circumstances (SES) in early life and adulthood. However, it is unclear how the health consequences of SES in early life and adulthood accumulate-for example, additively, synergistically. This study tests four hypotheses about how the health effects of early-life SES (measured by parental education) and adult SES (measured by own education) accumulate to shape functional limitations, whether the accumulation differs between men and women, and the extent to which key mechanisms explain the accumulation. It uses data from the 1994-2010 Health and Retirement Study on U.S. adults 50-100 years of age (N=24,026). The physical functioning benefits of parental and own education accumulated additively among men. While the physical functioning benefits generally accumulated among women, the functioning benefits from one's own education were dampened among women with low-educated mothers. The dampening partly reflected a strong tie between mothers' education level and women's obesity risk. Taken together, the findings reveal subtle differences between men and women in the life course origins of physical functioning. They also shed light on a key mechanism-obesity-that may help explain why a growing number of studies find that early-life SES is especially important for women's health.
越来越多的证据表明,成年人的健康状况反映了其早年和成年期的社会经济状况(SES)。然而,尚不清楚早年和成年期SES对健康的影响是如何累积的——例如,是累加的还是协同的。本研究检验了四个假设,即早年SES(以父母教育程度衡量)和成年期SES(以自身教育程度衡量)对健康的影响如何累积以形成功能受限,这种累积在男性和女性之间是否存在差异,以及关键机制在多大程度上解释了这种累积。该研究使用了1994年至2010年美国50至100岁成年人健康与退休研究的数据(N = 24,026)。在男性中,父母和自身教育对身体功能的益处是累加的。虽然女性总体上也积累了身体功能方面的益处,但对于母亲受教育程度低的女性来说,自身教育带来的功能益处会受到抑制。这种抑制部分反映了母亲的教育水平与女性肥胖风险之间的紧密联系。综合来看,研究结果揭示了男性和女性在身体功能的生命历程起源方面存在细微差异。它们还揭示了一个关键机制——肥胖——这可能有助于解释为什么越来越多的研究发现早年SES对女性健康尤为重要。