Abstract

BackgroundThe aims of this study were to examine indicators of socioeconomic deprivation among secondary school students and to determine associations between household poverty, neighbourhood deprivation and health indicators.MethodsData were from a nationally representative sample of 8500 secondary school students in New Zealand who participated in a health survey in 2012. Latent class analyses were used to group students by household poverty based on nine indicators of household socioeconomic deprivation: no car; no phone; no computer; their parent/s worry about not having enough money for food; more than two people sharing a bedroom; no holidays with their families; moving home more than twice that year; garages or living rooms used as bedrooms; and, no parent at home with employment. Multilevel generalized linear models were used to estimate the cross-level interaction between household poverty and neighbourhood deprivation with depressive symptoms, cigarette smoking and overweight/ obesity.ResultsThree groups of students were identified: 80 % of students had low levels of household poverty across all indicators; 15 % experienced moderate poverty; and 5 % experienced high levels of poverty. Depressive symptoms and cigarette smoking were 2–3 times higher in the poverty groups compared to student’s not experiencing poverty. There were also higher rates of overweight/ obesity among students in the poverty groups compared to students not experiencing poverty, but once covariates were accounted for the relationship was less clear. Of note, students experiencing poverty and living in affluent neighbourhoods reported higher levels of depressive symptoms and higher rates of cigarette smoking than students experiencing poverty and living in low socioeconomic neighbourhoods. This cross-level interaction was not seen for overweight/ obesity.ConclusionsMeasures of household socioeconomic deprivation among young people should not be combined with neighbourhood measures of socioeconomic deprivation due to non-linear relationships with health and behaviour indicators. Policies are needed that address household poverty alongside efforts to reduce socioeconomic inequalities in neighbourhoods.

Highlights

  • The aims of this study were to examine indicators of socioeconomic deprivation among secondary school students and to determine associations between household poverty, neighbourhood deprivation and health indicators

  • We identify adolescents experiencing household poverty, using latent class analysis, and examine the relationship with a wellestablished measure of neighbourhood deprivation in New Zealand, the New Zealand 2013 Deprivation Index [16]

  • We examine the relationship between adolescents experiencing household poverty, neighbourhood deprivation and health indicators using cross-level interaction multilevel models

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Summary

Introduction

The aims of this study were to examine indicators of socioeconomic deprivation among secondary school students and to determine associations between household poverty, neighbourhood deprivation and health indicators. While there has been an interest in studies exploring the role of socioeconomic status and health, there are few studies exploring issues to do with the measurement of socioeconomic status, especially in relation to the measurement of poverty among adolescents [5,6,7]. It is difficult to define a minimum income level below which poverty results. This is compounded by the fact that there is substantial mismatch between self-reported income and more direct measures of poverty, such as current living standards [8]

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