Chen Edith, Shalowitz Madeleine U, Story Rachel E, Ehrlich Katherine B, Manczak Erika M, Ham Paula J, Le Van, Miller Gregory E
Department of Psychology, Institute for Policy Research, Northwestern University, Evanston, Ill.
NorthShore University Health Systems, Evanston, Ill.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2017 Sep;140(3):828-835.e2. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2016.11.040. Epub 2017 Jan 13.
Previous literature documents associations between low socioeconomic status (SES) and poor health outcomes, including asthma. However, this literature has largely focused on the effects of current family circumstances.
We sought to test an intergenerational hypothesis, that the childhood SES that parents experience will be associated with asthma outcomes in their children, independent of effects of current family SES. Second, we aimed to test whether this association is in part due to difficulties in current parent-child relationships.
This was an observational study, whereby 150 parents were interviewed about their childhood SES and their children (physician-diagnosed asthma, ages 9-17 years) were interviewed about current family stress. Asthma control was assessed by parent report and child report (primary outcome), and blood was collected from children to measure cytokine production relevant to asthma (secondary outcomes).
To the degree that parents had lower childhood SES, their offspring showed worse asthma outcomes across multiple indicators. This included lower asthma control scores (parent and child report, Ps < .05), and greater stimulated production of T2 and T1 cytokines by PBMCs (Ps < .05). These associations were independent of current family SES. Mediation analyses were consistent with a scenario wherein parents with low childhood SES had current family relationships that were more stressful, and these difficulties, in turn, related to worse asthma control and greater cytokine production in children.
These results suggest the potential "long reach" of low SES across generations, and the importance of expanding theories of how the social environment can affect childhood asthma to include characteristics of earlier generations.
既往文献记载了社会经济地位低下(SES)与包括哮喘在内的不良健康结局之间的关联。然而,这些文献大多聚焦于当前家庭环境的影响。
我们试图检验一种代际假说,即父母童年时期的SES将与他们子女的哮喘结局相关,而不受当前家庭SES影响。其次,我们旨在检验这种关联是否部分归因于当前亲子关系中的困难。
这是一项观察性研究,对150名父母就其童年SES进行访谈,并对他们患有医生诊断哮喘的9至17岁子女就当前家庭压力进行访谈。通过父母报告和子女报告评估哮喘控制情况(主要结局),并采集子女血液以测量与哮喘相关的细胞因子产生情况(次要结局)。
父母童年SES越低,其子女在多个指标上的哮喘结局越差。这包括较低的哮喘控制评分(父母和子女报告,P<0.05),以及外周血单核细胞(PBMCs)刺激产生的T2和T1细胞因子增加(P<0.05)。这些关联独立于当前家庭SES。中介分析结果与以下情形一致:童年SES低的父母当前的家庭关系压力更大,而这些困难反过来又与子女更差的哮喘控制和更高的细胞因子产生相关。
这些结果表明低SES可能具有跨代的“深远影响”,并且有必要扩展关于社会环境如何影响儿童哮喘的理论,以纳入更早几代人的特征。