Torssander Jenny
Swedish Institute for Social Research, Stockholm University, SE- 10691 Stockholm, Sweden.
Soc Sci Med. 2014 Dec;122:148-56. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2014.10.043. Epub 2014 Oct 22.
Recent research has shown that the parents of well-educated children live longer than do other parents and that this association is only partly confounded by the parent's own socioeconomic position. However, the relationships between other aspects of children's socioeconomic position (e.g., occupational class and economic resources) and parental mortality have not been examined. Using the Swedish Multi-generation Register that connects parents to their children, this paper studies the associations of children's various socioeconomic resources (education, occupation, and income) and parents' mortality. The models are adjusted for a range of parental socioeconomic resources and include the resources of the parents' partners. In addition to all-cause mortality, five causes of death are analyzed separately (circulatory disease mortality, overall cancer, lung cancer, breast cancer, and prostate cancer). The results show net associations between all included indicators of children's socioeconomic position and parents' mortality risk, with the clearest association for education. Children's education is significantly associated with all of the examined causes of death except prostate cancer. Breast cancer mortality is negatively related to offspring's education but not the mothers' own education. To conclude, children's education seems to be a key factor compared with other dimensions of socioeconomic position in the offspring generation. This finding suggests that explanations linked to behavioral norms or knowledge are more plausible than those linked to access to material resources. However, it is possible that children's education - to a greater degree than class and income - captures unmeasured parental characteristics. The cause-specific analyses imply that future research should investigate whether offspring's socioeconomic position is linked to the likelihood of developing diseases and/or the chances of treating them. A broader family perspective in the description and explanations of social inequalities in health that includes the younger generation may increase our understanding of why these inequalities persist across the life course.
近期研究表明,受过良好教育的孩子的父母比其他父母寿命更长,而且这种关联仅部分地受到父母自身社会经济地位的混淆。然而,孩子社会经济地位的其他方面(如职业阶层和经济资源)与父母死亡率之间的关系尚未得到研究。本文利用将父母与其子女联系起来的瑞典多代登记册,研究了孩子的各种社会经济资源(教育、职业和收入)与父母死亡率之间的关联。这些模型针对一系列父母社会经济资源进行了调整,并纳入了父母伴侣的资源。除全因死亡率外,还分别分析了五种死因(循环系统疾病死亡率、总体癌症、肺癌、乳腺癌和前列腺癌)。结果显示,孩子社会经济地位的所有纳入指标与父母死亡风险之间存在净关联,其中教育方面的关联最为明显。孩子的教育与除前列腺癌外的所有 examined 死因均显著相关。乳腺癌死亡率与子女的教育呈负相关,但与母亲自身的教育无关。总之,与后代社会经济地位的其他维度相比,孩子的教育似乎是一个关键因素。这一发现表明,与行为规范或知识相关的解释比与获取物质资源相关的解释更合理。然而,孩子的教育可能比阶层和收入在更大程度上反映了未被衡量的父母特征。特定病因分析表明,未来的研究应调查后代的社会经济地位是否与患病可能性和/或治疗机会相关。在描述和解释健康方面的社会不平等时纳入年轻一代的更广泛家庭视角,可能会增进我们对这些不平等为何在整个生命过程中持续存在的理解。