Abstract

BackgroundChildhood socioeconomic disadvantage has been linked with obesity in cross-sectional research, although less is known about how changes in socioeconomic status influence the development of obesity. Researchers have hypothesized that upward socioeconomic mobility may attenuate the health effects of earlier socioeconomic disadvantage; while downward socioeconomic mobility might have a negative influence on health despite relative socioeconomic advantages at earlier stages. The purpose of the current study was to characterize trajectories of family income during childhood, and to evaluate the influence of these trajectories on adiposity at age 15.MethodsData were collected as part of the Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development (SECCYD) between 1991 and 2007 at 10 sites across the United States. A latent class growth analysis (LCGA) was conducted to identify trajectories of family income from birth to 15 years of age. Analyses of covariance (ANCOVAs) were conducted to determine whether measures of adiposity differed by trajectory, while controlling for relevant covariates.ResultsThe LCGA supported a 5-class trajectory model, which included two stable, one downward, and two upward trajectories. ANCOVAs indicated that BMI percentile, waist circumference, and skinfold thicknesses at age 15 differed significantly by trajectory, such that those who experienced downward mobility or stable low income had greater adiposity relative to the more advantaged trajectories. Conversely, upwardly mobile children and those with consistently adequate incomes had similar and more positive outcomes relative to the most disadvantaged trajectories.ConclusionsFindings suggest that promoting upward socioeconomic mobility among disadvantaged families may have a positive impact on obesity-related outcomes in adolescence.

Highlights

  • Childhood socioeconomic disadvantage has been linked with obesity in cross-sectional research, less is known about how changes in socioeconomic status influence the development of obesity

  • Low socioeconomic status (SES) in childhood is associated with adult obesity in longitudinal studies [for reviews, see 11,12], and initial research has indicated that childhood SES may have an influence on obesity beginning as early as adolescence [13]

  • Less attention has been paid to the change/social mobility model in which upward socioeconomic mobility is hypothesized to attenuate the negative effects of earlier socioeconomic disadvantage, while downward socioeconomic mobility is hypothesized to have a negative influence on health despite relative socioeconomic advantages at earlier stages

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Summary

Introduction

Childhood socioeconomic disadvantage has been linked with obesity in cross-sectional research, less is known about how changes in socioeconomic status influence the development of obesity. Researchers have hypothesized that upward socioeconomic mobility may attenuate the health effects of earlier socioeconomic disadvantage; while downward socioeconomic mobility might have a negative influence on health despite relative socioeconomic advantages at earlier stages. At least three broad theories, the timing or critical/ sensitive period, accumulation/cumulative risk, and change/social mobility models, describe how exposure to low SES in childhood might influence health later in life [for reviews, see 14-16]. In the timing or critical/sensitive period model, SES-related factors are hypothesized to have the greatest impact on health during specific developmental stages (e.g., in utero, early childhood, adolescence). Less attention has been paid to the change/social mobility model in which upward socioeconomic mobility is hypothesized to attenuate the negative effects of earlier socioeconomic disadvantage, while downward socioeconomic mobility is hypothesized to have a negative influence on health despite relative socioeconomic advantages at earlier stages

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