BMJ 1996;313:449-453 (24 August)
Papers
Inequalities in self rated health in the 1958 birth cohort: lifetime social circumstances or social mobility?
Chris Power,
senior lecturer in epidemiology,a
Sharon Matthews,
research assistant,a
Orly Manor,
lecturer in statistics ba Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Institute of Child Health, London WC1N 1EH,
b School of Public Health and Community Medicine, Hebrew University, Jerusalem, Israel
Correspondence to: Dr Power.
Abstract
Objective: To investigate explanations for social inequalities in health with respect to health related social mobility and cumulative socioeconomic circumstances over the first three decades of life.
Design: Longitudinal follow up.
Setting: Great Britain.
Subjects: Data from the 1958 birth cohort study (all children born in England, Wales, and Scotland during 3-9 March 1958) were used, from the original birth survey and from sweeps at 16, 23, and 33 years.
Main outcome measures: Subjects' own ratings of their health; social differences in self rated health at age 33.
Results: Social mobility varied by health status, with those reporting poor health at age 23 having higher odds of downward mobility than of staying in same social class. Men with poor health were also less likely to be upwardly mobile. Prevalence of poor health at age 33 increased with decreasing social class: from 8.5% in classes I and II to 17.7% in classes IV and V among men, and from 9.4% to 18.8% among women. These social differences remained significant after adjustment for effects of social mobility. Health inequalities attenuated when adjusted for social class at birth, at age 16, or at 23 or for self rated health at age 23. When adjusted for all these variables simultaneously, social differences in self rated health at age 33 were substantially reduced and no longer significant.
Conclusions: Lifetime socioeconomic circumstances accounted for inequalities in self reported health at age 33, while social mobility did not have a major effect on health inequalities.
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Key messages
- We examined the effects of cumulative exposure and social mobility on health at age 33 in a national birth cohort
- Cumulative lifetime exposures, as represented by social class at birth and at ages 16 and 23 and prior ill health, seemed to have a major role in creating health inequalities
- Health and social mobility were related (young adults with poor health tending to move downward), but social mobility was a minor explanation for inequalities in health at age 33
- Future research on health inequalities needs to take account of factors operating throughout life
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