| Literature DB >> 31154517 |
A M Hendriks1,2, C Finkenauer3,4, M G Nivard3, C E M Van Beijsterveldt3, R J Plomin5, D I Boomsma3,6, M Bartels3,6.
Abstract
Socioeconomic status (SES) affects the development of childhood behavioral problems. It has been frequently observed that children from low SES background tend to show more behavioral problems. There also is some evidence that SES has a moderating effect on the causes of individual differences in childhood behavioral problems, with lower heritability estimates and a stronger contribution of environmental factors in low SES groups. The aim of the present study was to examine whether the genetic architecture of childhood behavioral problems suggests the presence of protective and/or harmful effects across socioeconomic strata, in two countries with different levels of socioeconomic disparity: the Netherlands and the United Kingdom. We analyzed data from 7-year-old twins from the Netherlands Twin Register (N = 24,112 twins) and the Twins Early Development Study (N = 19,644 twins). The results revealed a nonlinear moderation effect of SES on the contribution of genetic and environmental factors to individual differences in childhood behavioral problems. The heritability was higher, the contribution of the shared environment was lower, and the contribution of the nonshared environment was higher, for children from high SES families, compared to children from low or medium SES families. The pattern was similar for Dutch and UK families. We discuss the importance of these findings for prevention and intervention goals.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood behavioral problems; Netherlands; Socioeconomic status; UK
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31154517 PMCID: PMC7056693 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-019-01357-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
SES categories
| SES | The Netherlands | The United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Elementary school Few years of more extensive primary education (mulo) Graduated mulo or general secondary education (mavo) Few years of lower technical education (lts) Few years higher general secondary education (havo)/pre-university education (vwo) | No qualifications CSE grade 2–5 or 0-level/GCSE grade D-G |
| Medium | Graduated havo/vwo Few years intermediate vocational education (mbo) Graduated mbo Few years of higher vocational education (hbo) or university | CSE grade 1 or 0-level/GCSE grade A-C A-level or S-level Higher National Certificates |
| High | Graduated hbo Graduated university Postgraduate | Higher National Diplomas Undergraduate Postgraduate qualification |
Descriptive statistics
| SES strata | N pairs | Mean boys | Variance boys | Mean girls | Variance girls | Total mean | Total variance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Netherlands | |||||||
| SES low | 2109 | 6.64 | 31.08 | 5.29 | 23.16 | 5.96 | 27.55 |
| SES medium | 5143 | 6.07 | 28.20 | 4.68 | 20.52 | 5.37 | 24.77 |
| SES high | 4730 | 5.04 | 24.57 | 3.75 | 14.68 | 4.40 | 20.05 |
| Total | 12,046 | 5.77 | 27.74 | 4.43 | 19.08 | 5.09 | 23.83 |
| The United Kingdom | |||||||
| SES low | 1372 | 2.59 | 3.91 | 2.06 | 3.13 | 2.27 | 3.49 |
| SES medium | 5059 | 1.96 | 3.13 | 1.60 | 2.33 | 1.74 | 2.66 |
| SES high | 3265 | 1.61 | 2.40 | 1.24 | 1.82 | 1.40 | 2.08 |
| Total | 9822 | 1.88 | 2.98 | 1.51 | 2.29 | 1.69 | 2.66 |
Twin correlations
| SES strata | The Netherlands | The United Kingdom | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| MZ | DZ | MZ | DZ | |
| SES low | 0.87 [0.84, 0.89] | 0.55 [0.49, 0.60] | 0.83 [0.76, 0.88] | 0.53 [0.43, 0.62] |
| SES medium | 0.85 [0.83, 0.87] | 0.53 [0.49, 0.57] | 0.79 [0.75, 0.82] | 0.49 [0.43, 0.54] |
| SES high | 0.76 [0.73, 0.79] | 0.41 [0.36, 0.46] | 0.70 [0.64, 0.76] | 0.41 [0.34, 0.48] |
Statistics of the fitted models
| Model number | Model | Estimated parameters | − 2 LL | AIC | Compared to model | Δ − 2 LL | Δ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 | Saturated model with thresholds equal for MZ and DZ twins, correlations equal for boys and girls | 36 | 61,852.35 | 30,693 | 466.35 | ||||
| 1 | Thresholds equal across SES | 20 | 62,132.26 | 30,709 | 714.26 | 0 | 279.91 | 16 | 3.63e−50 |
| 2 | Correlations equal across SES | 28 | 61,915.42 | 30,701 | 513.42 | 0 | 63.07 | 8 | 1.16e−10 |
| 3 | Thresholds equal across countries | 24 | 62,155.55 | 30,705 | 745.55 | 0 | 303.19 | 12 | 1.00e−57 |
| 4 | Correlations equal across countries | 30 | 61,865.90 | 30699 | 467.90 | 0 | 13.54 | 6 | 0.04 |
| 5 | ACE model based on the results of the final saturated model | 33 | 62,175.85 | 30,696 | 783.85 | ||||
| 6 | A, C, and E equal across low, medium, and high SES | 27 | 62,234.37 | 30,702 | 830.37 | 5 | 58.52 | 6 | 9.01e−11 |
| 6.1 | A, C, and E equal across low and medium SES | 30 | 62,179.76 | 30,699 | 781.76 | 5 | 3.91 | 3 | 0.27 |
| 6.2 | A, C, and E equal across low and high SES | 30 | 62,218.81 | 30,699 | 820.81 | 5 | 42.96 | 3 | 2.51e−09 |
| 6.3 | A, C, and E equal across medium and high SES | 30 | 62,215.38 | 30,699 | 817.38 | 5 | 39.53 | 3 | 1.34e−08 |
Model number corresponds to the description in “Results”. − 2 LL refers to the minus 2 log likelihood. df represents the number of degrees of freedom of the model. Δ − 2 LL refers to the difference in minus 2 log likelihood of the compared models. Δ df refers to the difference in number of degrees of freedom of the compared models. p corresponds to the p value of the difference in model fit between the compared models
Parameter estimates of the best fitting saturated model (model 3) with 95% confidence intervals
| The Netherlands | The United Kingdom | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Correlation | Correlation | |||
| MZ | DZ | MZ | DZ | |
| SES low | 0.86 [0.83, 0.88] | 0.54 [0.49, 0.59] | 0.86 [0.83, 0.88] | 0.54 [0.49, 0.59] |
| SES medium | 0.83 [0.81, 0.85] | 0.51 [0.48, 0.54] | 0.83 [0.81, 0.85] | 0.51 [0.48, 0.54] |
| SES high | 0.74 [0.71, 0.77] | 0.41 [0.37, 0.45] | 0.74 [0.71, 0.77] | 0.41 [0.37, 0.45] |
Parameter estimates of the best fitting ACE model (model 4) with 95% confidence intervals from the model estimating the thresholds and separately for the Netherlands and the United Kingdom from the model estimating the absolute variance
| SES category | A unstandardized | C unstandardized | E unstandardized | A | C | E |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NL SES low | 0.69 [0.55, 0.84] | 0.24 [0.11, 0.37] | 0.14 [0.11, 0.18] | 0.64 [0.51, 0.79] | 0.23 [0.12, 0.35] | 0.13 [0.11, 0.16] |
| NL SES medium | 0.66 [0.57, 0.75] | 0.22 [0.13, 0.30] | 0.16 [0.14, 0.18] | 0.64 [0.55, 0.73] | 0.21 [0.13, 0.29] | 0.15 [0.13, 0.18] |
| NL SES high | 0.66 [0.55, 0.77] | 0.06 [0.00, 0.15] | 0.23 [0.20, 0.26] | 0.70 [0.59, 0.82] | 0.06 [0.00, 0.16] | 0.24 [0.21, 0.27] |
| UK SES low | 1.29 [0.81, 1.88] | 0.52 [0.06, 0.98] | 0.37 [0.27, 0.52] | 0.59 [0.37, 0.86] | 0.24 [0.03, 0.45] | 0.17 [0.12, 0.24] |
| UK SES medium | 1.01 [0.79, 1.24] | 0.30 [0.12, 0.49] | 0.34 [0.29, 0.41] | 0.61 [0.48, 0.75] | 0.18 [0.07, 0.30] | 0.21 [0.18, 0.25] |
| UK SES high | 1.05 [0.70, 1.42] | 0.21 [0.00, 0.49] | 0.53 [0.43, 0.66] | 0.59 [0.39, 0.79] | 0.12 [0.00, 0.27] | 0.30 [0.24, 0.37] |
Fig. 1Unstandardized and standardized estimates of variance components from the best fitting ACE model with 95% confidence intervals. The top half of the figure represents unstandardized estimates of variance components due to A (additive genetic factors), C (shared environment), and E (nonshared environment) for the different SES strata (i.e., low, medium, and high) for the Netherlands on the left and the United Kingdom on the right, respectively. The lower half of the figure displays the standardized estimates of variance due to A, C, and E across SES strata and countries