Department of Sociology, Minnesota Population Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
Division of Epidemiology and Community Health, School of Public Health, Minnesota Population Center, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2022 Sep 1;77(9):1661-1673. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbac045.
Retrospective measures of childhood socioeconomic status (SES) in cohort studies of aging that first observe people late in life-such as the Health and Retirement Study (HRS)-are widely used. However, their measurement validity and reliability are unknown. We assess the reliability and validity of the HRS's retrospective measures of parental education and childhood family finances.
We use records for 6,343 HRS sample members who were children in 1940 that have been linked to records from the complete-count 1940 U.S. Census. We assess interrater reliability by comparing (a) retrospective reports of childhood SES collected from sample members in the 1992-2018 HRS to (b) prospective measures of parallel concepts collected from HRS sample members' parents in the 1940 Census. We assess predictive validity by comparing the results of analyses that model later-life outcomes as a function of childhood SES as measured both prospectively and retrospectively.
Interrater reliabilities of retrospective measures of parental education are high; however, the same is not true of the retrospective measure of childhood family finances. Both retrospective and prospective measures of childhood SES are predictive of later-life outcomes, and with similar strengths and directions of associations for most outcomes.
Researchers who rely on retrospective indicators of childhood SES from the HRS should be aware of their measurement properties. They are measured with error, and that error modestly attenuates estimates of their associations with later-life outcomes. However, prospective and retrospective measures of childhood SES have similar predictive validity. These findings should reassure researchers who rely on retrospective measures of childhood SES in the HRS and similarly designed surveys.
在研究衰老的队列研究中,广泛使用回顾性测量儿童时期的社会经济地位(SES),这些研究首次观察到生命后期的人群,如健康与退休研究(HRS)。然而,其测量的有效性和可靠性尚不清楚。我们评估 HRS 对父母教育和儿童家庭经济状况的回顾性测量的可靠性和有效性。
我们使用了与 1940 年美国完整人口普查记录相链接的 HRS 样本中 6343 名在 1940 年为儿童的记录。我们通过比较(a)从 HRS 样本成员中收集的关于儿童 SES 的回顾性报告与(b)从 HRS 样本成员的父母在 1940 年人口普查中收集的关于平行概念的前瞻性测量,来评估内部信度。我们通过比较分析模型来评估预测效度,该模型将晚年的结果作为前瞻性和回顾性测量的儿童 SES 的函数。
父母教育的回顾性测量的内部信度很高;然而,儿童家庭财务状况的回顾性测量则不然。儿童 SES 的回顾性和前瞻性测量都可以预测晚年的结果,并且对于大多数结果,它们的关联具有相似的强度和方向。
依赖 HRS 中儿童 SES 的回顾性指标的研究人员应该了解其测量特性。它们存在测量误差,并且该误差会适度减弱它们与晚年结果的关联估计值。然而,儿童 SES 的前瞻性和回顾性测量具有相似的预测有效性。这些发现应该使依赖 HRS 和类似设计的调查中的儿童 SES 的回顾性测量的研究人员感到放心。