Childhood socioeconomic position and adult mental health wellbeing: Evidence from four British birth cohort studies
Childhood socioeconomic position and adult mental health wellbeing: Evidence from four British birth cohort studies
Background: there is much evidence showing that childhood socioeconomic position is associated with physical health in adulthood; however existing evidence on how early life disadvantage is associated with adult mental wellbeing is inconsistent. This paper investigated whether childhood socioeconomic position (SEP) is associated with adult mental wellbeing and to what extent any association is explained by adult SEP using harmonised data from four British birth cohort studies.
Methods: the sample comprised 20,717 participants with mental wellbeing data in the Hertfordshire Cohort Study (HCS), the MRC National Survey of Health and Development (NSHD), the National Child Development Study (NCDS), and the British Cohort Study (BCS70). Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) scores at age 73 (HCS), 60–64 (NSHD), 50 (NCDS), or 42 (BCS70) were used. Harmonised socioeconomic position (Registrar General’s Social Classification) was ascertained in childhood (age 10/11) and adulthood (age 42/43). Associations between childhood SEP, adult SEP, and wellbeing were tested using linear regression and multi-group structural equation models.
Results: more advantaged father’s social class was associated with better adult mental wellbeing in the BCS70 and the NCDS. This association was independent of adult SEP in the BCS70 but fully mediated by adult SEP in the NCDS. There was no evidence of an association between father’s social class and adult mental wellbeing in the HCS or the NSHD.
Conclusions: socioeconomic conditions in childhood are directly and indirectly, through adult socioeconomic pathways, associated with adult mental wellbeing, but findings from these harmonised data suggest this association may depend on cohort or age.
Wood, N.
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Bann, D.
dcbb5a9b-84f7-45dc-ac74-04250f444f0e
Hardy, R.
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Gale, Catharine
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Crawford, C.
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Stafford, Mia
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Wood, N.
6860682a-f3e3-4711-9e3d-cdf3fa633cc5
Bann, D.
dcbb5a9b-84f7-45dc-ac74-04250f444f0e
Hardy, R.
b3f0f66e-4cda-4e9a-aca1-955f7ecdd132
Gale, Catharine
5bb2abb3-7b53-42d6-8aa7-817e193140c8
Crawford, C.
5700a2ed-07d9-4620-8ae6-18a9ffeb6433
Stafford, Mia
49c85454-26d6-4dc9-a421-9e89f9db5856
Wood, N., Bann, D., Hardy, R., Gale, Catharine, Crawford, C. and Stafford, Mia
(2017)
Childhood socioeconomic position and adult mental health wellbeing: Evidence from four British birth cohort studies.
PLoS ONE.
(doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0185798).
Abstract
Background: there is much evidence showing that childhood socioeconomic position is associated with physical health in adulthood; however existing evidence on how early life disadvantage is associated with adult mental wellbeing is inconsistent. This paper investigated whether childhood socioeconomic position (SEP) is associated with adult mental wellbeing and to what extent any association is explained by adult SEP using harmonised data from four British birth cohort studies.
Methods: the sample comprised 20,717 participants with mental wellbeing data in the Hertfordshire Cohort Study (HCS), the MRC National Survey of Health and Development (NSHD), the National Child Development Study (NCDS), and the British Cohort Study (BCS70). Warwick Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale (WEMWBS) scores at age 73 (HCS), 60–64 (NSHD), 50 (NCDS), or 42 (BCS70) were used. Harmonised socioeconomic position (Registrar General’s Social Classification) was ascertained in childhood (age 10/11) and adulthood (age 42/43). Associations between childhood SEP, adult SEP, and wellbeing were tested using linear regression and multi-group structural equation models.
Results: more advantaged father’s social class was associated with better adult mental wellbeing in the BCS70 and the NCDS. This association was independent of adult SEP in the BCS70 but fully mediated by adult SEP in the NCDS. There was no evidence of an association between father’s social class and adult mental wellbeing in the HCS or the NSHD.
Conclusions: socioeconomic conditions in childhood are directly and indirectly, through adult socioeconomic pathways, associated with adult mental wellbeing, but findings from these harmonised data suggest this association may depend on cohort or age.
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 September 2017
e-pub ahead of print date: 25 October 2017
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Local EPrints ID: 415652
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/415652
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: cf7eb9e1-ae68-45df-b491-98ba91d7901a
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Date deposited: 17 Nov 2017 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:49
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Author:
N. Wood
Author:
D. Bann
Author:
R. Hardy
Author:
C. Crawford
Author:
Mia Stafford
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