Tsenkova Vera, Pudrovska Tetyana, Karlamangla Arun
From the Center for Women's Health and Health Disparities Research (V.T.), University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, Wisconsin; Department of Sociology, (T.P.), University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas; and Department of Medicine (A.K.), UCLA, Los Angeles, California.
Psychosom Med. 2014 Oct;76(8):622-8. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0000000000000106.
We examined the relationship between childhood socioeconomic status (SES) and glucoregulation in later life and used a life-course framework to examine critical periods and underlying pathways.
Data came from the Midlife in the US (MIDUS) national study (n = 895). Childhood SES indicators retrospectively reported at MIDUS I were used to create a childhood SES disadvantage index. Adult SES disadvantage and potential pathways were measured at MIDUS I and included waist circumference, depressive symptoms, and physical activity. Glucose and hemoglobin A1c, measured approximately 9 to 10 years later at MIDUS II, were used to create the ordinal outcome measure (no diabetes/prediabetes/diabetes).
Childhood SES disadvantage predicted increased odds of prediabetes and diabetes net of age, sex, race, and smoking (odds ratio = 1.11, 95% confidence interval = 1.01-1.22). Childhood SES disadvantage predicted adult SES disadvantage (β = .26, p = .001) and the three key mediators: waist circumference (β = 0.10, p = .002), physical activity (β = -0.11, p = .001), and depressive symptoms (β = 0.07, p = .072). When childhood and adult SES disadvantage were in the same model, only adult SES predicted glucoregulation (odds ratio = 1.07, 95% confidence interval = 1.01-1.13). The SES disadvantage measures were no longer significantly associated with glucoregulation after including waist circumference, physical activity, and depressive symptoms, all of which were significant predictors of glucoregulation.
The consequences of childhood SES disadvantage are complex and include both critical period and pathway effects. The lack of a direct effect of childhood SES on glucoregulation does not negate the importance of early environment but suggests that early-life socioeconomic factors propel unequal life-course trajectories that ultimately influence health.
我们研究了儿童期社会经济地位(SES)与成年后血糖调节之间的关系,并使用生命历程框架来研究关键时期和潜在途径。
数据来自美国中年(MIDUS)全国性研究(n = 895)。在MIDUS I中回顾性报告的儿童期SES指标用于创建儿童期SES劣势指数。在MIDUS I中测量成年期SES劣势和潜在途径,包括腰围、抑郁症状和身体活动。在大约9至10年后的MIDUS II中测量的血糖和糖化血红蛋白用于创建有序结局指标(无糖尿病/糖尿病前期/糖尿病)。
儿童期SES劣势预测了在调整年龄、性别、种族和吸烟因素后糖尿病前期和糖尿病的患病几率增加(优势比 = 1.11,95%置信区间 = 1.01 - 1.22)。儿童期SES劣势预测了成年期SES劣势(β = 0.26,p = 0.001)以及三个关键中介因素:腰围(β = 0.10,p = 0.002)、身体活动(β = -0.11,p = 0.001)和抑郁症状(β = 0.07, p = 0.072)。当儿童期和成年期SES劣势处于同一模型时,只有成年期SES能预测血糖调节(优势比 = 1.07,95%置信区间 = 1.01 - 1.13)。在纳入腰围、身体活动和抑郁症状后,SES劣势指标与血糖调节不再显著相关,而这些因素均是血糖调节的显著预测因素。
儿童期SES劣势的后果是复杂的,包括关键时期和途径效应。儿童期SES对血糖调节缺乏直接影响并不否定早期环境的重要性,但表明早期社会经济因素推动了不平等的生命历程轨迹,最终影响健康。