SOCIAL DIFFERENCES IN HEALTH - LIFE-CYCLE EFFECTS BETWEEN AGES 23 AND33 IN THE 1958 BRITISH BIRTH COHORT

Citation
C. Power et al., SOCIAL DIFFERENCES IN HEALTH - LIFE-CYCLE EFFECTS BETWEEN AGES 23 AND33 IN THE 1958 BRITISH BIRTH COHORT, American journal of public health, 87(9), 1997, pp. 1499-1503
Citations number
43
Categorie Soggetti
Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath","Public, Environmental & Occupation Heath
ISSN journal
00900036
Volume
87
Issue
9
Year of publication
1997
Pages
1499 - 1503
Database
ISI
SICI code
0090-0036(1997)87:9<1499:SDIH-L>2.0.ZU;2-5
Abstract
Objectives. The purpose of this study was to determine whether social differences in health persist or widen during early adulthood. Methods . A longitudinal follow-up of the 1958 British birth cohort was invest igated, using social class at birth and six health measures at ages 23 and 33. A slope of inequality was estimated to represent social diffe rences in health.Results. Social gradients in health were evident by a ge 23: the prevalence of poor:health increased with decreasing social position. This was observed for several but not all health indicators. Social gradients persisted to age 33. The slope of inequality was gre atest for malaise (odds: ratio [OR] = 3.37 for men, 3.21 for women) an d obesity (OR = 4.80 for men and 2.84 for women), both at age 23, and for self-rated health in women at age 23 (OR = 2.94) and age 33 (OR = 3.22). Inequality increased significantly between ages 23 and 33 for l imiting illness in men, and lessened, although not significantly, for malaise, overweight, and obesity; social gradients remained constant f or self-rated health, respiratory symptoms, and asthma or wheezing. Co nclusions. Social gradients in health evident in this sample by age 23 persisted to age 33. Inequalities did not appear to widen consistentl y, but variable findings for several health measures suggest that ineq ualities reproduce through different pathways.