Abstract

BackgroundEvidence is inconsistent as to whether or not there are health inequalities in adolescence according to socio-economic position (SEP) and whether or when they emerge in early adulthood. Despite the large health inequalities literature, few studies have simultaneously compared the relative importance of ‘health selection’ versus ‘social causation’ at this life-stage. This study followed a cohort through the youth-adult transition to: (1) determine whether, and if so, when, health inequalities became evident according to both class of origin and current SEP; (2) compare the importance of health selection and social causation mechanisms; and (3) investigate whether these phenomena vary by gender.MethodsData are from a West-of-Scotland cohort, surveyed five times between age 15 (in 1987, N=1,515, response=85%) and 36. Self-reported physical and mental health were obtained at each survey. SEP was based on parental occupational class at 15, a combination of own education or occupational status at 18 and own occupational class (with an additional non-employment category) at older ages. In respect of when inequalities emerged, we used the relative index of inequality to examine associations between both parental and own current SEP and health at each age. In respect of mechanisms, path models, including SEP and health at each age, investigated both inter and intra-generational paths from SEP to health (‘causation’) and from health to SEP (‘selection’). Analyses were conducted separately for physical and mental health, and stratified by gender.ResultsAssociations between both physical and mental health and parental SEP were non-significant at every age. Inequalities according to own SEP emerged for physical health at 24 and for mental health at 30. There was no evidence of selection based on physical health, but some evidence of associations between mental health in early adulthood and later SEP (intra-generational selection). Paths indicated intra-generational (males) and inter-generational (females) social causation of physical health inequalities, and intra-generational (males and females) and inter-generational (females) social causation of mental health inequalities.ConclusionsThe results suggest complex and reciprocal relationships between SEP and health and highlight adolescence and early adulthood as a sensitive period for this process, impacting on future life-chances and health.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12889-015-2674-5) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Evidence is inconsistent as to whether or not there are health inequalities in adolescence according to socio-economic position (SEP) and whether or when they emerge in early adulthood

  • While the proportion of males working in non-manual occupations increased from around 40 % at age 24 to 70 % at 36, the proportion of females in non-manual occupations remained stable, at around two-thirds of the sample, throughout this early adulthood stage

  • The first question addressed by this paper, based on a Scottish cohort, born in 1972 and followed from age 15 in 1987 to age 36 in 2007/8, was whether, and if so, when do health inequalities emerge in early adulthood? Results confirmed previous findings [5, 20, 76] of little or no variation in mid-late adolescent health in this cohort according to SEP

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Summary

Introduction

Evidence is inconsistent as to whether or not there are health inequalities in adolescence according to socio-economic position (SEP) and whether or when they emerge in early adulthood. This study followed a cohort through the youth-adult transition to: (1) determine whether, and if so, when, health inequalities became evident according to both class of origin and current SEP; (2) compare the importance of health selection and social causation mechanisms; and (3) investigate whether these phenomena vary by gender. Several [1,2,3,4,5], but not all studies [6,7,8,9] suggest ‘relative equality’ in adolescence [5, 10], with little or no differentiation on a range of health measures according to parental socioeconomic position (SEP), contrasting with inequalities found earlier in childhood and later in adulthood. To answer the ‘how’ (mechanisms) question, we use structural equation modelling (SEM) including SEP and health at each age

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