Lee Dohoon, Jackson Margot
Department of Sociology, New York University, 295 Lafayette St., 4th Floor, New York, NY 10012, United States.
Department of Sociology, Brown University, Box 1916, Providence, RI 02912, United States.
Soc Sci Res. 2015 Nov;54:96-112. doi: 10.1016/j.ssresearch.2015.06.023. Epub 2015 Jun 27.
A large literature demonstrates the direct and indirect influence of health on socioeconomic attainment, and reveals the ways in which health and socioeconomic background simultaneously and dynamically affect opportunities for attainment and mobility. Despite an increasing understanding of the effects of health on social processes, research to date remains limited in its conceptualization and measurement of the temporal dimensions of health, especially in the presence of socioeconomic circumstances that covary with health over time. Guided by life course theory, we use data from the British National Child Development Study, an ongoing panel study of a cohort born in 1958, to examine the association between lifetime health trajectories and socioeconomic attainment in middle age. We apply finite mixture modeling to identify distinct trajectories of health that simultaneously account for timing, duration and stability. Moreover, we employ propensity score weighting models to account for the presence of time-varying socioeconomic factors in estimating the impact of health trajectories. We find that, when poor health is limited to the childhood years, the disadvantage in socioeconomic attainment relative to being continuously healthy is either insignificant or largely explained by time-varying socioeconomic confounders. The socioeconomic impact of continuously deteriorating health over the life course is more persistent, however. Our results suggest that accounting for the timing, duration and stability of poor health throughout both childhood and adulthood is important for understanding how health works to produce social stratification. In addition, the findings highlight the importance of distinguishing between confounding and mediating effects of time-varying socioeconomic circumstances.
大量文献证明了健康对社会经济成就的直接和间接影响,并揭示了健康与社会经济背景如何同时且动态地影响成就和流动机会。尽管人们对健康对社会进程的影响的理解日益加深,但迄今为止的研究在健康时间维度的概念化和测量方面仍很有限,尤其是在存在随时间与健康共同变化的社会经济环境的情况下。在生命历程理论的指导下,我们使用来自英国全国儿童发展研究的数据(一项对1958年出生的队列进行的正在进行的面板研究),来检验中年时期终身健康轨迹与社会经济成就之间的关联。我们应用有限混合模型来识别同时考虑时间、持续时间和稳定性的不同健康轨迹。此外,我们采用倾向得分加权模型来考虑在估计健康轨迹影响时随时间变化的社会经济因素的存在。我们发现,当健康状况不佳仅限于童年时期时,相对于持续健康而言,社会经济成就方面的劣势要么不显著,要么很大程度上由随时间变化的社会经济混杂因素所解释。然而,在整个生命历程中持续恶化的健康状况对社会经济的影响更为持久。我们的结果表明,考虑童年和成年期健康状况不佳的时间、持续时间和稳定性对于理解健康如何导致社会分层很重要。此外,研究结果凸显了区分随时间变化的社会经济环境的混杂效应和中介效应的重要性。