School of Nursing, Nagoya City University, Nagoya, Japan.
Graduate School of Medicine, Kyoto University, Kyoto, Japan.
PLoS One. 2018 May 24;13(5):e0197961. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0197961. eCollection 2018.
Social inequalities are widely accepted to have a deleterious effect on children's mental health, and those with lower socioeconomic status generally experience more mental health issues. In this study, we examine the impact of socioeconomic situations of children's families during their early childhood on the children's social adaptation in Japanese elementary school.
The current investigation consisted of two sets of data relating to two separate years (with a one-year interval). The participants included preschoolers aged five years at Time 1 (the first year) and first graders aged six years at Time 2 (the second year); 1,712 met the inclusion criteria for both years. Parents of the participants completed a self-reported questionnaire regarding their SES (i.e., family economy and mother's education) and their children's mental health. Mental health was assessed using the Child Behavior Checklist/4-18, Parent Report.
For each SES indicator, we found an inverse relationship across all the symptom dimensions. Specifically, bivariate analyses revealed that lower family income, maternal education level, and paternal education level predict all three domains of behavioral problems (i.e., internalized problems, externalized problems, and total behavioral problems). Further, multivariate analyses revealed that lower family income consistently predicts all domains of behavioral problems, lower maternal education level predicted externalized problems and total behavioral problems, and paternal education level did not predict any clinically significant behavioral problems.
In this sample, we found that, for children, family income and parental education when entering preschool were significant predictors of mental health problems after elementary school enrollment; in particular, low income and low maternal educational achievement predicted a high probability of the development of a psychiatric disorder. A greater understanding of the mechanisms of these associations could contribute to improvements in interventions aimed at preventing child maladjustment.
社会不平等被广泛认为对儿童的心理健康有不良影响,而社会经济地位较低的儿童通常会经历更多的心理健康问题。在这项研究中,我们考察了儿童在幼儿期家庭的社会经济状况对其在日本小学的社会适应的影响。
本研究包括两组数据,涉及两个不同的年份(间隔一年)。参与者包括在时间 1(第一年)时年龄为 5 岁的学前儿童和在时间 2(第二年)时年龄为 6 岁的一年级儿童;共有 1712 名儿童符合两年的数据纳入标准。参与者的父母完成了一份关于他们的社会经济地位(即家庭经济状况和母亲的教育水平)和他们孩子的心理健康的自我报告问卷。心理健康使用儿童行为检查表/4-18,家长报告进行评估。
对于每个社会经济地位指标,我们在所有症状维度上都发现了一个反比关系。具体来说,双变量分析表明,较低的家庭收入、母亲的教育水平和父亲的教育水平预测了行为问题的所有三个领域(即内化问题、外化问题和总行为问题)。此外,多变量分析表明,较低的家庭收入一致地预测了所有行为问题领域,较低的母亲教育水平预测了外化问题和总行为问题,而父亲的教育水平与任何临床显著的行为问题无关。
在这个样本中,我们发现,对于儿童来说,进入学前时的家庭收入和父母教育是小学入学后心理健康问题的重要预测因素;特别是,低收入和母亲教育水平低预示着精神障碍发生的可能性较高。更深入地了解这些关联的机制可能有助于改善旨在预防儿童适应不良的干预措施。