TY - JOUR
T1 - Early-life income inequality and adolescent health and well-being
AU - Elgar, Frank J.
AU - Gariépy, Geneviève
AU - Torsheim, Torbjørn
AU - Currie, Candace
N1 - The writing of this article was supported by grants from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (MOP 235688) and Canada Research Chairs Programme awarded to the first author.
PY - 2017/2
Y1 - 2017/2
N2 - A prevailing hypothesis about the association between income inequality
and poor health is that inequality intensifies social hierarchies,
increases stress, erodes social and material resources that support
health, and subsequently harms health. However, the evidence in support
of this hypothesis is limited by cross-sectional, ecological studies and
a scarcity of developmental studies. To address this limitation, we
used pooled, multilevel data from the Health Behaviour in School-aged
Children study to examine lagged, cumulative, and trajectory
associations between early-life income inequality and adolescent health
and well-being. Psychosomatic symptoms and life satisfaction were
assessed in surveys of 11- to 15-year-olds in 40 countries between 1994
and 2014. We linked these data to national Gini indices of income
inequality for every life year from 1979 to 2014. The results showed
that exposure to income inequality from 0 to 4 years predicted
psychosomatic symptoms and lower life satisfaction in females after
controlling lifetime mean income inequality, national per capita income,
family affluence, age, and cohort and period effects. The cumulative
income inequality exposure in infancy and childhood (i.e., average Gini
index from birth to age 10) related to lower life satisfaction in female
adolescents but not to symptoms. Finally, individual trajectories in
early-life inequality (i.e., linear slopes in Gini indices from birth to
10 years) related to fewer symptoms and higher life satisfaction in
females, indicating that earlier exposures mattered more to predicting
health and wellbeing. No such associations with early-life income
inequality were found in males. These results help to establish the
antecedent-consequence conditions in the association between income
inequality and health and suggest that both the magnitude and timing of
income inequality in early life have developmental consequences that
manifest in reduced health and well-being in adolescent girls.
AB - A prevailing hypothesis about the association between income inequality
and poor health is that inequality intensifies social hierarchies,
increases stress, erodes social and material resources that support
health, and subsequently harms health. However, the evidence in support
of this hypothesis is limited by cross-sectional, ecological studies and
a scarcity of developmental studies. To address this limitation, we
used pooled, multilevel data from the Health Behaviour in School-aged
Children study to examine lagged, cumulative, and trajectory
associations between early-life income inequality and adolescent health
and well-being. Psychosomatic symptoms and life satisfaction were
assessed in surveys of 11- to 15-year-olds in 40 countries between 1994
and 2014. We linked these data to national Gini indices of income
inequality for every life year from 1979 to 2014. The results showed
that exposure to income inequality from 0 to 4 years predicted
psychosomatic symptoms and lower life satisfaction in females after
controlling lifetime mean income inequality, national per capita income,
family affluence, age, and cohort and period effects. The cumulative
income inequality exposure in infancy and childhood (i.e., average Gini
index from birth to age 10) related to lower life satisfaction in female
adolescents but not to symptoms. Finally, individual trajectories in
early-life inequality (i.e., linear slopes in Gini indices from birth to
10 years) related to fewer symptoms and higher life satisfaction in
females, indicating that earlier exposures mattered more to predicting
health and wellbeing. No such associations with early-life income
inequality were found in males. These results help to establish the
antecedent-consequence conditions in the association between income
inequality and health and suggest that both the magnitude and timing of
income inequality in early life have developmental consequences that
manifest in reduced health and well-being in adolescent girls.
KW - Income inequality
KW - Adolescents
KW - Children
KW - Health
KW - Well-being
KW - Health Behaviour in School-aged Children
KW - Causal inference
U2 - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.10.014
DO - 10.1016/j.socscimed.2016.10.014
M3 - Article
SN - 0277-9536
VL - 174
SP - 197
EP - 208
JO - Social Science and Medicine
JF - Social Science and Medicine
ER -