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1980 - 2008年家庭社会经济出身对教育健康回报的影响:检验性别、队列和年龄的重要性

Health returns to education by family socioeconomic origins, 1980-2008: Testing the importance of gender, cohort, and age.

作者信息

Andersson Matthew A

机构信息

Department of Sociology, Baylor University, One Bear Place, P.O. Box 97326, Waco, TX 76798, USA.

出版信息

SSM Popul Health. 2016 Aug 20;2:549-560. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2016.08.006. eCollection 2016 Dec.

Abstract

Recent studies find that health returns to education are elevated among those who come from disadvantaged families. These findings suggest that education may be a health resource that compensates or "substitutes" for lower parental socioeconomic status. Alternatively, some studies find support for a cumulative (dis)advantage perspective, such that educational health returns are higher among those who already were advantaged, widening initial health (dis)advantages across the life course. However, it remains unclear whether these findings are dependent on gender or cohort, and this is a fundamental oversight given marked differences between men and women in educational and health inequalities across the twentieth century. Drawing on national US data (1980-2002 General Social Survey with 2008 National Death Index Link), I indeed find that the presence or strength of resource substitution or cumulative (dis)advantage depends upon health measure as well as gender and cohort. For self-rated health, cumulative (dis)advantage explains educational health disparities, but among men only. Cumulative (dis)advantage in avoiding fair or poor health is partly explained by cohort and age variation in health returns to education, and cumulative (dis)advantage in excellent health is more robust in earlier cohorts and at older ages. For mortality, resource substitution is instead supported, but for women only. Among those from disadvantaged families, educational mortality buffering increases with cohort but diminishes with age. Taken together, these findings confirm prior research showing that adult health inequalities linked to education depend on family background, and extend this work by demonstrating that the nature and extent of these dynamics differ considerably depending on the health outcome being assessed and on an individual's historical context, life course stage, and gender.

摘要

最近的研究发现,对于来自弱势家庭的人来说,教育带来的健康回报有所提高。这些发现表明,教育可能是一种健康资源,可以补偿或“替代”较低的父母社会经济地位。或者,一些研究支持累积(不利)优势观点,即教育带来的健康回报在那些已经具有优势的人当中更高,从而在整个生命历程中扩大了最初的健康(不利)差距。然而,这些发现是否取决于性别或队列仍不清楚,鉴于20世纪男性和女性在教育和健康不平等方面存在显著差异,这是一个根本性的疏忽。利用美国的全国数据(1980 - 2002年综合社会调查与2008年全国死亡指数链接),我确实发现资源替代或累积(不利)优势的存在或强度取决于健康指标以及性别和队列。对于自评健康,累积(不利)优势解释了教育带来的健康差异,但仅适用于男性。在避免健康状况一般或较差方面的累积(不利)优势部分可以通过教育带来的健康回报在队列和年龄上的差异来解释,而在健康状况极佳方面的累积(不利)优势在早期队列和较高年龄时更为明显。对于死亡率,支持的是资源替代,但仅适用于女性。在来自弱势家庭的人中,教育对死亡率的缓冲作用随队列增加,但随年龄减小。综上所述,这些发现证实了先前的研究,即与教育相关的成人健康不平等取决于家庭背景,并通过表明这些动态的性质和程度因所评估的健康结果、个人的历史背景、生命历程阶段和性别而有很大差异,扩展了这项工作。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/c814/5757957/d1c9f0809dfc/gr1.jpg

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