Bromberger Joyce T, Schott Laura L, Matthews Karen A, Kravitz Howard M, Harlow Siobán D, Montez Jennifer Karas
Department of Epidemiology and Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh, 3811 O'Hara Street, Pittsburgh, PA, 15213, USA.
Arch Womens Ment Health. 2017 Aug;20(4):495-504. doi: 10.1007/s00737-017-0747-4. Epub 2017 Jun 28.
Childhood socioeconomic disadvantage may contribute to adult depression. Understanding pathways by which early socioeconomic adversity may shape adult depression is important for identifying areas for intervention. Studies to date have focused on one potential pathway, adult socioeconomic status (SES), and assessed depression at only one or a few time points. Our aims were to examine (a) the association between childhood SES (low vs. high) and depressive symptom burden in midlife and (b) whether adult socioeconomic, psychosocial, and physical health characteristics are important pathways. Using annual data from a cohort of 1109 black and white US women recruited in 1996-1997, we evaluated the association between childhood SES and depressive symptom burden across 15 years in midlife and whether adult characteristics-financial difficulty, lower education, stressful events, low social support, low role functioning, medical conditions, and bodily pain-mediated the association. Depressive symptom burden was estimated by calculating area under the curve of annual scores across 15 years of the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D). In unadjusted models, low childhood SES was associated with greater depressive burden (P = 0.0002). Each hypothesized mediator, individually, did not reduce the association. However, when five of the hypothesized mediators were included together in the same analysis, they explained more than two thirds of the association between childhood SES and depressive symptom burden reducing the P value for childhood SES to non-significance (P = 0.20). These results suggest that childhood SES influences midlife depressive symptom burden through a cluster of economic stress, limited social resources, and physical symptoms in adulthood.
儿童时期的社会经济劣势可能导致成年后抑郁。了解早期社会经济逆境可能影响成年后抑郁的途径,对于确定干预领域至关重要。迄今为止的研究集中在一条潜在途径,即成年后的社会经济地位(SES),并且仅在一个或几个时间点评估抑郁情况。我们的目的是研究:(a)儿童时期的SES(低与高)与中年时期抑郁症状负担之间的关联;(b)成年后的社会经济、心理社会和身体健康特征是否为重要途径。利用1996年至1997年招募的1109名美国黑人和白人女性队列的年度数据,我们评估了儿童时期的SES与中年时期15年抑郁症状负担之间的关联,以及成年特征(经济困难、低教育水平、压力事件、低社会支持、低角色功能、医疗状况和身体疼痛)是否介导了这种关联。抑郁症状负担通过计算15年期间流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D)年度得分曲线下面积来估计。在未调整模型中,儿童时期低SES与更高的抑郁负担相关(P = 0.0002)。每个假设的中介因素单独来看,均未减弱这种关联。然而,当将五个假设的中介因素纳入同一分析时,它们解释了儿童时期SES与抑郁症状负担之间关联的三分之二以上,将儿童时期SES的P值降至无统计学意义(P = 0.20)。这些结果表明,儿童时期的SES通过成年期的一系列经济压力、有限的社会资源和身体症状来影响中年时期的抑郁症状负担。