Abstract
Socioeconomic differences in health are ubiquitous across age groups, cultures, and health domains. However, variation in the size and pattern of health inequalities appears to relate to the measure of socioeconomic position (SEP) applied. Little attention has been paid to these differences in adolescents and their implications for health surveillance and policy. We examined health inequalities in 1371 adolescents in seven European countries using four measures of SEP: youth-reported material assets and subjective social status and parent-reported material assets and household income. For each SEP variable, we estimated risk ratios, risk differences, concentration curves, and concentration indices of inequality for fair/poor self-rated health and low life satisfaction. Results showed that inequalities in health and life satisfaction were largest when subjective social status was used as the SEP variable. Moreover, health inequalities defined by subjective social status did not change after differences in assets and income were statistically controlled. Although material assets yielded similar health inequalities as household income, the results suggest that subjective and objective SEP relate differently to adolescent health and are not equivalent indicators of the same construct. In addition, possible bidirectional effects on health and wellbeing may inflate health inequalities defined by subjective social status. These results indicate that SEP differences in adolescent health are relate more closely to psychosocial processes than to material inequality.
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Acknowledgments
The study was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes for Health Research, the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada, and the Canada Research Chairs programme. The Health Behaviour in School-aged Children study (HBSC) is a World Health Organisation (WHO) collaborative cross-national study carried out in collaboration with WHO Regional Office for Europe. The International Coordinator of the 2014 survey was Candace Currie, University of St. Andrews and the Data Bank Manager was Oddrun Samdal, University of Bergen. The data used for this research were collected by principal investigators in Greenland (Birgit Niclasen), Italy (Franco Cavallo), Norway (Oddrun Samdal), Poland (Joanna Mazur), Romania (Adriana Baban), Scotland (Candace Currie), and Slovakia (Andrea Madarasova Geckova). For details, see http://www.hbsc.org.
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Elgar, F.J., McKinnon, B., Torsheim, T. et al. Patterns of Socioeconomic Inequality in Adolescent Health Differ According to the Measure of Socioeconomic Position. Soc Indic Res 127, 1169–1180 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-015-0994-6
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s11205-015-0994-6