Jackson Margot, Short Susan E
Associate Professor of Sociology at Brown University.
Professor of Sociology at Brown University.
RSF. 2018 Apr;4(4):98-119. doi: 10.7758/rsf.2018.4.4.06.
Sex/gender differences in health are a function of social and biological factors, and their interplay over the life course. Despite a large body of research documenting sex/gender as a determinant of health behavior and outcomes, far less scholarship examines how these differences are reflected in physiologic function-an important mediator through which social experiences "get under the skin"-in young adulthood. Using nationally representative, longitudinal data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent to Adult Health (Add Health), we examine the relationship between gender and biological function (inflammation and immunosuppression) in young adulthood. Second, we examine the contribution of social and economic circumstances in childhood and early adulthood to gender differences in health. The findings reveal strong gender differences in physiologic function, which are robust to the inclusion of many indicators of the social environment, in both inflammation and immune function.
健康方面的性别差异是社会和生物因素及其在生命历程中相互作用的结果。尽管有大量研究记录了性别是健康行为和结果的一个决定因素,但很少有学术研究探讨这些差异在生理功能(社会经历“深入肌肤”的一个重要中介)中是如何体现的,尤其是在青年期。利用来自全国青少年健康纵向研究(Add Health)具有全国代表性的纵向数据,我们研究了青年期性别与生物功能(炎症和免疫抑制)之间的关系。其次,我们考察了童年和成年早期的社会经济状况对健康方面性别差异的影响。研究结果显示,在炎症和免疫功能方面,生理功能存在显著的性别差异,在纳入许多社会环境指标后,这些差异依然稳健。