Levesque Alexander Ryan, MacDonald Sarah, Berg Selinda Adelle, Reka Roger
Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, University of Western Ontario, London, ON Canada.
Leddy Library, University of Windsor, Windsor, ON Canada.
Adolesc Res Rev. 2021;6(2):91-123. doi: 10.1007/s40894-021-00151-8. Epub 2021 Feb 2.
Understanding how child and adolescent health is influenced by fluctuations in socioeconomic status has important public health and policy implications, as children are often subjected to both micro and macro-level socioeconomic events. This study provides the first systematic review to date on the relationship between changes in household or parental socioeconomic status and subsequent child and adolescent health outcomes. Eighty articles were identified for inclusion in this review, examining 85 different socioeconomic exposures in five categories: Income (n = 64), Employment (n = 14), Socioeconomic Mobility (n = 3), Education (n = 2), and Food Insecurity (n = 2). The health outcomes analyzed by these eighty articles were separated into eight discrete categories, with many articles examining outcomes in more than one category: Anthropometric Measurements (n = 21), Cognition and Development (n = 15), Dental Health (n = 3), Health Behaviours (n = 9), Mental Health (n = 12), Overall Parent/Guardian Assessed health (n = 6); Physical Health Outcomes (n = 11), and Socio-Emotional Behaviour (n = 30). Several consistent patterns emerged in the literature, such as a link between increased income and improved, or decreased income and deteriorating, cognition, dental health, and physical health. The results of this review suggest a need to replicate current studies in diverse geographies to expand generalizability and clarify regional patterns. There should also be an effort to go beyond income, and employment, to assess the relationship between less frequently studied socioeconomic exposures and child health outcomes.
The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s40894-021-00151-8.
了解儿童和青少年健康如何受到社会经济地位波动的影响具有重要的公共卫生和政策意义,因为儿童经常受到微观和宏观层面社会经济事件的影响。本研究提供了迄今为止关于家庭或父母社会经济地位变化与随后的儿童和青少年健康结果之间关系的首次系统综述。确定了80篇文章纳入本综述,研究了五类85种不同的社会经济暴露因素:收入(n = 64)、就业(n = 14)、社会经济流动性(n = 3)、教育(n = 2)和粮食不安全(n = 2)。这80篇文章分析的健康结果分为八个不同类别,许多文章研究了不止一个类别的结果:人体测量(n = 21)、认知与发育(n = 15)、牙齿健康(n = 3)、健康行为(n = 9)、心理健康(n = 12)、父母/监护人总体评估的健康状况(n = 6);身体健康结果(n = 11)和社会情感行为(n = 30)。文献中出现了几种一致的模式,例如收入增加与认知、牙齿健康和身体健康改善之间的联系,或者收入减少与认知、牙齿健康和身体健康恶化之间的联系。本综述结果表明,需要在不同地区重复当前研究,以扩大普遍性并阐明区域模式。还应努力超越收入和就业,评估较少研究的社会经济暴露因素与儿童健康结果之间的关系。
在线版本包含可在10.1007/s40894-021-00151-8获取的补充材料。