Literature DB >> 12927477

Social causation, health-selective mobility, and the reproduction of socioeconomic health inequalities over time: panel study of adult men.

Jon Ivar Elstad1, Steinar Krokstad.   

Abstract

This study examines how socioeconomic inequalities in perceived health were reproduced as a cohort of adult men became 10 years older, and focuses especially on the role of social causation and health-selective mobility. A two-wave panel data set collected by the Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (HUNT), Norway, is used, and the study is based on a sample of 9189 men aged 25-49 at baseline. Systematic socioeconomic inequalities in perceived health were observed both at baseline and 10 years later when the sample was aged 35-59. Measured as age-adjusted percentage differences, inequalities in perceived health widened during the study period, both among those who were continuously employed and between the employed and non-employed. The pattern of health inequalities was transformed as a result of numerous changes in perceived health and considerable social mobility during the study period. Compared to higher white collar, changes in perceived health during the study period were more negative among medium-level and manual occupations, and even more negative among the non-employed. Mobility between occupational classes among those employed at both observation points was not selective for health, but transitions into and out of employment were strongly health-selective. It is argued that the transformation of the health inequality pattern among those continuously employed was solely due to social causation, i.e., to more negative changes in perceived health among medium/manual occupations than among the white collar. The wider difference in perceived health between the employed and non-employed was, however, primarily a result of health-selective mobility into and out of the non-employed category.

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Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12927477     DOI: 10.1016/s0277-9536(02)00514-2

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Sci Med        ISSN: 0277-9536            Impact factor:   4.634


  20 in total

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6.  Employment status, working conditions and depressive symptoms among German employees born in 1959 and 1965.

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8.  Adolescent health and high school dropout: a prospective cohort study of 9000 Norwegian adolescents (the Young-HUNT).

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9.  Socioeconomic Status and Health across the Life Course: A Test of the Social Causation and Health Selection Hypotheses.

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Journal:  Soc Forces       Date:  2009

10.  Job loss from poor health, smoking and obesity: a national prospective survey in France.

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