Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway.
University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway.
Int J Epidemiol. 2021 Nov 10;50(5):1615-1627. doi: 10.1093/ije/dyab066.
Children with low-income parents have a higher risk of mental disorders, although it is unclear whether other parental characteristics or genetic confounding explain these associations and whether it is true for all mental disorders.
In this registry-based study of all children in Norway (n = 1 354 393) aged 5-17 years from 2008 to 2016, we examined whether parental income was associated with childhood diagnoses of mental disorders identified through national registries from primary healthcare, hospitalizations and specialist outpatient services.
There were substantial differences in mental disorders by parental income, except for eating disorders in girls. In the bottom 1% of parental income, 16.9% [95% confidence interval (CI): 15.6, 18.3] of boys had a mental disorder compared with 4.1% (95% CI: 3.3, 4.8) in the top 1%. Among girls, there were 14.2% (95% CI: 12.9, 15.5) in the lowest, compared with 3.2% (95% CI: 2.5, 3.9) in the highest parental-income percentile. Differences were mainly attributable to attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder in boys and anxiety and depression in girls. There were more mental disorders in children whose parents had mental disorders or low education, or lived in separate households. Still, parental income remained associated with children's mental disorders after accounting for parents' mental disorders and other factors, and associations were also present among adopted children.
Mental disorders were 3- to 4-fold more prevalent in children with parents in the lowest compared with the highest income percentiles. Parents' own mental disorders, other socio-demographic factors and genetic confounding did not fully explain these associations.
尽管尚不清楚是否有其他父母特征或遗传混杂因素可以解释这些关联,以及这些关联是否适用于所有精神障碍,但低收入父母的孩子患精神障碍的风险更高。
在这项基于登记的研究中,研究了 2008 年至 2016 年期间挪威所有 5-17 岁的儿童(n=1354393 人),通过初级保健、住院和专科门诊服务的国家登记册,研究了父母收入与儿童精神障碍诊断之间的关系。
除了女性的饮食障碍外,精神障碍的发生率在父母收入方面存在显著差异。在父母收入最低的 1%中,16.9%(95%可信区间:15.6,18.3)的男孩患有精神障碍,而收入最高的 1%中这一比例为 4.1%(95%可信区间:3.3,4.8)。在女孩中,收入最低的 14.2%(95%可信区间:12.9,15.5)患有精神障碍,而收入最高的 1%中这一比例为 3.2%(95%可信区间:2.5,3.9)。差异主要归因于男孩的注意缺陷多动障碍和女孩的焦虑和抑郁。父母有精神障碍或低教育程度,或生活在单亲家庭的孩子,其精神障碍也较多。尽管如此,在考虑到父母的精神障碍和其他因素后,父母的收入仍与孩子的精神障碍有关,并且这种关联在领养的孩子中也存在。
父母收入最低的孩子患精神障碍的可能性是父母收入最高的孩子的 3-4 倍。父母自身的精神障碍、其他社会人口因素和遗传混杂因素并不能完全解释这些关联。