Assari Shervin, Caldwell Cleopatra Howard, Mincy Ronald B
Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Center for Research on Ethnicity, Culture and Health, School of Public Health, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
J Clin Med. 2018 May 1;7(5):93. doi: 10.3390/jcm7050093.
Socioeconomic status (SES) is essential for maintaining health, and self-rated health (SRH) is not an exception to this rule. This study explored racial differences in the protective effects of maternal educational attainment at birth against poor SRH of the youth 15 years later.
Using data from the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study (FFCWS), this 15-year longitudinal study followed 1934 youths from birth to age 15. This sample was composed of White ( = 497, 25.7%), and Black ( = 1437, 74.3%) youths. The independent variable was maternal educational attainment at birth. SRH at age 15 was the dependent variable. Family structure was the covariate. Race was the focal moderator. We ran logistic regression models in the pooled sample, as well as stratified models based on race.
In the pooled sample, maternal educational attainment and family structure were not predictive of SRH for the youths at age 15. Race interacted with maternal educational attainment, indicating a stronger association between maternal educational attainment at birth on youth SRH for Whites compared to Blacks. In race stratified models, maternal educational attainment at birth was protective against poor SRH for White but not Black youths.
White but not Black youths gain less SRH from their maternal educational attainment. Enhancing education attainment may not have identical effects across racial groups. The health status of Blacks may be less responsive to improvements in maternal educational attainment. Policies should go beyond investing in educational attainment by empowering Black families to better use the educational attainment that they gain. Policies and programs should reduce the costs of upward social mobility for minority families.
社会经济地位(SES)对维持健康至关重要,自评健康(SRH)也不例外。本研究探讨了出生时母亲教育程度对15年后青少年不良自评健康的保护作用中的种族差异。
利用脆弱家庭与儿童福利研究(FFCWS)的数据,这项为期15年的纵向研究跟踪了1934名从出生到15岁的青少年。该样本由白人(=497,25.7%)和黑人(=1437,74.3%)青少年组成。自变量是出生时母亲的教育程度。15岁时的自评健康是因变量。家庭结构是协变量。种族是核心调节变量。我们在合并样本中运行了逻辑回归模型,以及基于种族的分层模型。
在合并样本中,母亲的教育程度和家庭结构并不能预测15岁青少年的自评健康。种族与母亲的教育程度相互作用,表明与黑人相比,出生时母亲的教育程度与白人青少年的自评健康之间的关联更强。在按种族分层的模型中,出生时母亲的教育程度对白人青少年的不良自评健康有保护作用,但对黑人青少年没有。
白人青少年而非黑人青少年从母亲的教育程度中获得的自评健康较少。提高教育程度在不同种族群体中可能没有相同的效果。黑人的健康状况对母亲教育程度的改善可能反应较小。政策应超越对教育程度的投资,通过增强黑人家庭更好地利用他们所获得的教育程度的能力来实现。政策和项目应降低少数族裔家庭向上社会流动的成本。