Abstract

Reducing population levels of frailty is an important goal, and preventing its development in midadulthood could be pivotal. There is limited evidence on associations between childhood socioeconomic position (SEP) and frailty. Using data on the 1958 British birth cohort (followed from 1958 to 2016; n = 8,711), we aimed to 1) establish the utility of measuring frailty in midlife, by examining associations between a 34-item frailty index at age 50 years (FI50y) and mortality at ages 50–58 years, and 2) examine associations between early-life SEP and FI50y and investigate whether these associations were explained by adult SEP. Hazard ratios for mortality increased with increasing frailty; for example, the sex-adjusted hazard ratio for the highest quintile of FI50y versus the lowest was 4.07 (95% confidence interval (CI): 2.64, 6.25). Lower early-life SEP was associated with higher FI50y. Compared with participants born in the highest social class, the estimated total effect on FI50y was 42.0% (95% CI: 35.5, 48.4) for participants born in the lowest class, with the proportion mediated by adult SEP being 0.45% (95% CI: 0.35, 0.55). Mediation by adult SEP was negligible for other early-life SEP classes. Findings suggest that early-life SEP is associated with frailty and that adult SEP only partially explains this association. Results highlight the importance of improving socioeconomic circumstances across the life course to reduce inequalities in midlife frailty.

Highlights

  • D with other frailty measures, it is more sensitive to small changes in total effect (TE) health status(33) making it suitable for examining frailty in mid-adulthood, a life-stage DI when health deficits are accumulating at a slower rate than at older ages(34)

  • We examined associations between early-life socioeconomic position (SEP) and frailty index at 50y (FI50y) and ORIGI investigated whether these associations were explained by adult SEP

  • We examined whether associations between early-life SEP and FI50y varied by sex; there was no evidence of effect modification (P=0.35), sex-adjusted analyses are presented

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Summary

Introduction

A literature is L emerging on links between early-life socioeconomic position (SEP) and frailty at older ages(13,21– NA 25). These studies have relied on relatively small sample sizes (N

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