Division of Epidemiology, School of Public Health, University of California Berkeley, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California San Francisco, USA.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2022 Feb 3;77(2):383-391. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glab249.
Higher educational attainment predicts lower hypertension. Yet, associations between nontraditional educational trajectories (eg, interrupted degree programs) and hypertension are less well understood, particularly among structurally marginalized groups who are more likely to experience these non-traditional trajectories.
In National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1979 cohort data (N = 6 317), we used sequence and cluster analyses to identify groups of similar educational sequences-characterized by timing and type of terminal credential-that participants followed from age 14-48 years. Using logistic regression, we estimated associations between the resulting 10 educational sequences and hypertension at age 50. We evaluated effect modification by individual-level indicators of structural marginalization (race, gender, race and gender, and childhood socioeconomic status [cSES]).
Compared to terminal high school (HS) diploma completed at traditional age, terminal GED (OR: 1.32; 95%CI: 1.04, 1.66) or Associate degree after <HS (OR: 1.93; 95%CI: 1.11, 3.35) was associated with higher hypertension. There was some evidence of effect modification. Hypertension associated with delayed HS diploma versus HS diploma at a traditional age (the reference) was lower for Black men than White men (interaction term: 0.44; 95%CI: 0.21, 0.91); similarly, hypertension associated with <HS versus completing HS at a traditional age was lower for people with low cSES than people with high cSES (interaction term: 0.52; 95%CI: 0.30, 0.90).
Both type and timing to terminal credential matter for hypertension but effects may vary by experiences of structural marginalization. Documenting the nuanced ways in which complex educational trajectories are associated with health could elucidate underlying mechanisms and inform systems-level interventions for health equity.
较高的教育程度预示着较低的高血压患病率。然而,非传统教育轨迹(例如中断学位课程)与高血压之间的关联尚不清楚,特别是在那些更有可能经历这些非传统轨迹的结构性边缘群体中。
在国家青年纵向调查 1979 年队列数据(N=6317)中,我们使用序列和聚类分析来识别参与者从 14 岁到 48 岁期间遵循的具有相似教育序列的群体-以终端证书的时间和类型为特征。使用逻辑回归,我们估计了这 10 种教育序列与 50 岁时高血压之间的关联。我们评估了个体结构性边缘化指标(种族、性别、种族和性别以及儿童社会经济地位[cSES])的调节作用。
与传统年龄完成的高中(HS)文凭相比,获得普通教育发展证书(GED)或低于 HS 的副学士学位(OR:1.32;95%CI:1.04,1.66)或副学士学位(OR:1.93;95%CI:1.11,3.35)与高血压的风险增加相关。存在一些调节作用的证据。与传统年龄获得 HS 文凭相比,黑人男性的高血压与延迟获得 HS 文凭(参考组)的相关性较低(交互项:0.44;95%CI:0.21,0.91);同样,与传统年龄完成 HS 相比,cSES 较低的人群获得 HS 文凭与高血压的相关性较低(交互项:0.52;95%CI:0.30,0.90)。
终端证书的类型和时间都与高血压有关,但影响可能因结构性边缘化的经历而有所不同。记录复杂教育轨迹与健康之间关联的细微方式可以阐明潜在机制,并为健康公平的系统层面干预提供信息。