Статусные неравенства в здоровье: значение социального положения родительской семьи

  • Дарья Ходоренко The Sociological Institute of the RAS — Branch of the Federal Center of Theoretical and Applied Sociology of the Russian Academy of Sciences (SI RAS — FCTAS RAS), St. Petersburg, Russia khodasha@gmail.com
Для цитирования
Ходоренко Д.(2019) Статусные неравенства в здоровье: значение социального положения родительской семьи. Журнал социологии и социальной антропологии, 22(3): 57-79. DOI: https://doi.org/10.31119/jssa.2019.22.3.3

Аннотация

In accordance with the decrease in a social status, health declines dramatically — firm social inequalities are formed in a society. The article is devoted to a crucial issue in modern studies of inequalities in health. In the article we check the hypothesis according to which a human-being's health state depends on their parents' status. Moreover, their own achieved position in a society can impact a health state as well. Different combitnations of individual and parents' statuses, demonstrating upward or downward mobility or stability, can influence our health in different ways. It also contributes to strengthening or overcoming the inequalities. The analysis of status interactions in their influence on the health of the participants of European Social Study (ESS 2012, 29 countries, representative national survey) was conducted by statistic methods of two-level linear modeling. The results demonstrate that parents' high level of education as well as respondent's one leads to a higher estimation of their own health. The increase in educational status leads to a better health condition of people coming from various social stratums. However, this dependence can be observed better in those cases where people are brought up in secured families. In some degree parents' high social status can resist negative effects of downward mobility on health.
Ключевые слова:
health, social inequalities, achieved level of education, father’s education, European social survey

Литература

Adler N.E., Stewart J. (2010) Health disparities across the lifespan: Meaning, methods, and mechanisms: Health disparities across the lifespan. Annals of the New York Academy of Science, 1186(1): 5–23.

Agampodi T.C., Agampodi S.B., Glozier N., Siribaddana S. (2015) Measurement of social capital in relation to health in low and middle income countries (LMIC): A systematic review. Social Science and Medicine, 128: 95–104.

Andersson M.A., Vaughan K. (2017) Adult health returns to education by key childhood social and economic indicators: Results from representative European data. SSM — Population Health, 3: 411–418.

Ben-Shlomo Y. (2002) A life course approach to chronic disease epidemiology: conceptual models, empirical challenges and interdisciplinary perspectives. International Journal of Epidemiology, 31(2): 285–293.

Braveman P., Barclay C. (2009) Health Disparities Beginning in Childhood: A Life-Course Perspective. Pediatrics, 124(3): 163–175.

ESS Round 6: European Social Survey Round 6 Data (2012) Data file edition 2.2. NSD — Norwegian Centre for Research Data, Norway — Data Archive and distributor of ESS data for ESS ERIC [http://www.europeansocialsurvey.org/data/download.html?r=6 ] (accessed: 14.03.2019).

Haas S. (2008) Trajectories of functional health: The ‘long arm’ of childhood health and socioeconomic factors. Social Science and Medicine, 66(4): 849–861.

Hyde M. (2006) Comparison of the effects of low childhood socioeconomic position and low adulthood socioeconomic position on self-rated health in four European studies. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 60(10): 882–886.

Marmot M., Wilkinson R. (2006) Social Determinants of Health, 2nd Edition. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Link B.G., Phelan J. (1995) Social conditions as fundamental causes of disease. Journal of Health and Social Behavior, Extra Issue: 80–94.

Luo Y., Waite L.J. (2005) The impact of childhood and adult SES on physical, mental, and cognitive well-being in later life. The Journals of Gerontology. Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 60(2): 93–101.

Mirowski J., Ross C.E., Reynolds J. (2000) Links between social status and health status. Handbook of medical sociology, 5: 47–67.

Mirowsky J., Ross C.E. (2003) Education, social status, and health. New York: A. de Gruyter.

Monden C.W.S., de Graaf N. D. (2013) The importance of father’s and own education for self-assessed health across Europe: an East-West divide?: Father’s and own education and health across Europe. Sociology of Health and Illness, 35(7): 977–992.

Neumayer E., Pl?mper T. (2016) Inequalities of Income and Inequalities of Longevity: A Cross-Country Study. American Journal of Public Health, 106(1):160–165.

Pakpahan E., Hoffmann R., Kr?ger H. (2017) The long arm of childhood circumstances on health in old age: Evidence from SHARELIFE. Advances in Life Course Research, 31: 1–10.

Pavalko E.K., Caputo J. (2013) Social Inequality and Health across the Life Course. American Behavioral Scientist, 57(8): 1040–1056.

Pensola T.H., Martikainen P. (2003) Cumulative social class and mortality from various causes of adult men. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health, 57(9): 745–751.

Pudrovska T., Anishkin A. (2013) Early-Life Socioeconomic Status and Physical Activity in Later Life: Evidence from Structural Equation Models. Journal of Aging and Health, 25(3): 383–404.

Puolakka E., Pahkala K., Laitinen T.T., Magnussen C.G., Hutri-K?h?nen N., M?nnist? S., Juonala M. (2018) Childhood socioeconomic status and lifetime health behaviors: The Young Finns Study. International Journal of Cardiology, 258: 289–294.

Raudenbush S.W., Bryk A.S. (2002) Hierarchical Linear Models: Applications and Data Analysis Methods. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.

Ross C.E., Mirowsky J. (2011) The interaction of personal and parental education on health. Social Science and Medicine, 72(4): 591–599.

Rusinova N.L., Safronov V.V. (2014) Znachenie socialnogo kapitala dlya zdorovya [The Influence of Social Capital on Health in Europe]. Zhurnal Sotsiologii i Sotsialnoy Antropologii [The Journal of Sociology and Social Anthropology], 17(3): 112–113 (in Russian).

Wilkinson R.G., Pickett K.E. (2006) Income inequality and population health: A review and explanation of the evidence. Social Science and Medicine, 62(7): 1768–1784.

Форматы цитирования
Другие форматы цитирования:

ACM
[1]
Ходоренко, Д. 2019. Статусные неравенства в здоровье: значение социального положения родительской семьи. Журнал социологии и социальной антропологии. 22, 3 (ноя. 2019), 57-79. DOI:https://doi.org/10.31119/jssa.2019.22.3.3.