Department of Population Medicine, Center for Healthcare Research in Pediatrics (CHeRP), Harvard Medical School and Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Institute, Boston, Massachusetts; Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Division of Adolescent and Young Adult Medicine, Boston Children's Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; Department of Pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Adolesc Health. 2017 Oct;61(4):461-470. doi: 10.1016/j.jadohealth.2017.04.006. Epub 2017 Jul 19.
While education-based disparities in health are common, the extent to which chronic conditions contribute to education gaps and to consequent health disparities is not fully understood. As such, we sought to investigate educational aspirations, expectations, and attainment among youth with and without chronic conditions and to determine if these relationships mediated subsequent disparities in health and well-being.
Longitudinal data on 3,518 youths are from the 1997-2013 Panel Study of Income Dynamics, a population-based survey. Multivariate regression was used to assess disparities in educational aspirations, expectations, and attainment by chronic conditions and the subsequent effects on health and well-being, adjusting for important potential confounders.
Youth with chronic medical conditions (YCMCs) did not report significantly lower educational aspirations than their healthy peers; however, YCMC reported lower expectations for their educational attainment and fewer YCMC had earned their desired degree by the end of follow-up (e.g., ≥bachelor's degree: 19.9% for YCMC vs. 26.0% for peers, p < .05). YCMC reported significantly worse general health, lower life satisfaction, and lower psychological well-being in young adulthood than did their healthy peers. These disparities persisted after adjustment for confounders; the association between chronic disease and health was partially, but significantly, mediated by actual educational attainment.
Findings suggest an important risk mechanism through which YCMC may acquire socioeconomic disadvantage as they develop and progress through educational settings. Disproportionate lags in education, from expectation to attainment, may in turn increase YCMC's susceptibility to poor health and well-being in the future.
虽然基于教育的健康差异很常见,但慢性疾病在多大程度上导致了教育差距以及由此产生的健康差异尚不完全清楚。因此,我们试图调查有和没有慢性疾病的年轻人的教育愿望、期望和成就,并确定这些关系是否会对随后的健康和幸福感产生差异。
来自于 1997-2013 年收入动态面板研究的 3518 名青少年的纵向数据,这是一项基于人群的调查。使用多元回归来评估慢性疾病对教育愿望、期望和成就的差异,以及这些差异对健康和幸福感的后续影响,同时调整了重要的潜在混杂因素。
患有慢性医疗疾病的青少年 (YCMC) 并没有报告比他们健康的同龄人低的教育愿望;然而,YCMC 对他们的教育成就期望较低,并且在随访结束时,获得他们期望的学位的 YCMC 较少(例如,≥学士学位:YCMC 为 19.9%,同龄人则为 26.0%,p<.05)。与他们健康的同龄人相比,YCMC 在成年早期报告的总体健康状况较差、生活满意度较低和心理幸福感较低。这些差异在调整了混杂因素后仍然存在;慢性疾病与健康之间的关联部分但显著地通过实际教育成就来介导。
研究结果表明,YCMC 可能通过一种重要的风险机制在他们发展和在教育环境中取得进步的过程中获得社会经济劣势。从期望到成就的教育不成比例的滞后,反过来可能会增加 YCMC 在未来易患不良健康和幸福感的风险。