© 2005 American Public Health Association DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2004.041129
Debbie A. Lawlor is with the Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Bristol, England. At the time of this study, G. David Batty was with the Department of Social Medicine, Institute of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark. Susan M. B. Morton is with the School of Population Health, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand. Heather Clark is with the Dugald Baird Centre for Research on Womens Health, University of Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland. Sally Macintyre is with the MRC Social and Public Health Sciences Unit, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, Scotland. David A. Leon is with the Department of Epidemiology and Population Health, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, England. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Debbie A. Lawlor, Department of Social Medicine, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, Whiteladies Road, Bristol BS7 8QA, United Kingdom (e-mail: d.a.lawlor{at}bristol.ac.uk).
Objectives. We assessed the associations of childhood socioeconomic position with cardiovascular disease risk factors (smoking, binge alcohol drinking, and being overweight) and examined the roles of educational attainment and cognitive functioning in these associations. Methods. Data were derived from a cohort study involving 7184 individuals who were born in Aberdeen, Scotland, between 1950 and 1956; had detailed records on perinatal characteristics, childhood anthropometry, and cognitive functioning; and responded to a mailed questionnaire when they were aged 45 to 52 years. Results. Strong graded associations existed between social class at birth and smoking, binge drinking, and being overweight. Adjustment for educational attainment completely attenuated these associations. However, after control for adult social class, adult income and other potential confounding or mediating factors, some association remained. Conclusions. Educational attainment is an important mediating factor in the relation between socioeconomic adversity in childhood and smoking, binge drinking, and being overweight in adulthood.
Studies have revealed associations between low childhood socioeconomic position or status (SEP) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) and CVD risk factors in later life that are independent of adult SEP.115 However, most of these studies have involved the use of adults reports of childhood SEP, which may be incomplete and inaccurate.16 Before developing effective policy interventions to abolish the link between low childhood SEP and CVD, it is necessary to understand the causal pathways connecting them. Low childhood socioeconomic position is associated with low cognitive functioning and low educational attainment.17 Thus, it is plausible that cognitive function and educational attainment are important intermediaries in the association between childhood SEP and adult risk factors, factors that may in turn lead to CVD. The aims of the present study were to assess the associations of childhood SEP with CVD risk factors (smoking, binge alcohol drinking, and being overweight) and to examine the role of educational attainment and cognitive function in these associations in a cohort born in the city of Aberdeen, Scotland, between 1950 and 1956.
Study Participants The Aberdeen Children of the 1950s Study involved a cohort of 12150 children who were born in Aberdeen, Scotland, between 1950 and 1956 and who took part in a child development survey in the 1960s.1820 Comprehensive information was abstracted from the Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Data-bank regarding course of mothers pregnancy and childrens physical characteristics at birth.19 In 1999, this cohort study was reinitiated, and between 2000 and 2002 surviving cohort members were mailed a health questionnaire.18
Assessment of Childhood Socioeconomic Position
Assessment of Cognitive Functioning and Educational Attainment At 7 years of age the participants were administered the Moray House Picture Intelligence Tests.18 All participants were administered the test within 6 months of their 7th birthday. The tests given at age 11, also conducted within 6 months of participants 11th birthday, included a battery of Moray House tests: 2 tests of verbal reasoning and 1 each of arithmetic and English. Because the mean verbal reasoning score was highly correlated with the arithmetic and English scores (Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.86 and 0.89, respectively, P < .001 for both) and all 3 showed similar associations with exposures and outcomes in this study, mean verbal reasoning scores at 11 years were used as the measure of cognitive functioning at that age. In the mailed health questionnaire, participants were asked to report the age at which they left secondary education and to indicate their educational or vocational qualifications. A list was provided that included an option of "no formal qualification" and then a hierarchy of seven formal United Kingdom educational qualifications from leaving certificate (lower level of qualification by those leaving school at a minimum school-leaving ageaged 15 years for this cohort) through a university degree.
Assessment of Other Childhood Characteristics
Adult Characteristics Participants were asked about their most recent occupation. Occupations were categorized into the same 6 categories used for childhood social class. Also, participants were asked to indicate their personal gross annual income (no income, less than £2000, £2000£5999, £6000£9999, £10 000£14 999, £15 000£19 999, £20 000£29 999, £30000£39999, £40000 or more); weekly equivalent amounts were provided for each category. Respondents were asked about their own smoking behavior and whether their parents had smoked when they were children. Binge drinking was defined as consumption of 4 or more alcoholic drinks in 1 episode at least once a week. In addition, participants were asked to record their weight and height. Of the 7007 respondents who provided an estimate of their weight, 6092 (87%) reported that they had used a scale. There was a tendency for those who had not used a scale to report weights lower than their weights (74.5 kg vs 75.5 kg; P = .07). Therefore, all analyses that included body mass index, obesity, or weight were adjusted by including a dummy variable for scale nonuse in the multivariate models. Overweight was defined as a body mass index of 25 kg/m2 or more.22
Statistical Analysis Relative indexes of inequality (RIIs)23 were estimated for the associations of social class at birth, educational attainment, adult social class, and adult income with childhood and adult height. For each SEP exposure, a score was assigned to each category on the basis of the midpoint of the proportion of the population in that category. For example, if 10% of the respondents were assigned to the professional social class category and a score from 0 (highest SEP) to 1 (lowest SEP) represented the entire population, participants in this group would be allocated a score of 0.05 (0.1/2); if 20% of the respondents were in the managerial category, this group would be allocated a score of 0.20 (0.1 + 0.2/2); and so on. The index of inequality was then obtained by regressing the outcome on each of these SEP scores. The virtue of this technique is that it is directly interpretable as comparing, in each case, the highest (0) and lowest (1) SEP indicators assigned.23 A series of multiple logistic regression models was used to assess the associations of social class at birth with the risk factors examined. In these models, participants age, cognitive functioning at ages 7 and 11, age at leaving secondary school, intrauterine growth z score, and childhood height and body mass index were all entered as continuous variables. Birth order, family size, adult social class, adult income, parental smoking, and educational qualifications were all entered as categorical variables. These analyses were repeated with the inclusion of RII scores (as just detailed) for social class at birth and each measure of adult SEP and education. Likelihood ratio tests were used to assess interactions. All analyses were conducted with Stata version 8.0 (Stata Corp, College Station, Tex).
Table 1
No evidence was found of any interactions between gender and social class at birth in any of the associations (P > .4 for all associations), and thus we present all results for women and men combined. The associations of adult income with both current smoking behavior and being overweight differed according to gender (P < .01 for both). The odds ratio (OR) for current smoking among low-income versus higher income women was 1.95 (95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.65, 2.31); the corresponding OR among men was 2.73 (95% CI = 2.31, 3.23). Odds ratios for being overweight were 1.17 (95% CI = 1.02, 1.35) among women and 0.73 (95% CI = 0.61, 0.86) among men. An interaction term was incorporated into all of the logistic regression models that included both gender and income as covariates. No evidence of interactions between gender and income for other outcomes was found, nor was there evidence of interactions between gender and adult social class or educational attainment in any of the associations (P > .2 for all associations).
Table 2
Table 3
Table 4
To further illustrate the impact of education, we compared (1) the OR for manual (vs nonmanual) social class at birth for each risk factor after adjusting for all of the remaining potential confounding and mediating factors (model 13) and (2) the ORs obtained when educational attainment was subsequently added to the models (model 14). In the case of all outcomes, there was evidence that some association remained when all of the covariates other than education were included. With the additional inclusion of education, some of the association with being overweight remained, but the associations with all other outcomes were eliminated.
When RII scores were estimated for childhood SEP, education, adult income, and social class in these models, the patterns of the associations and effects of potential mediating factors were similar to those shown in Table 4
Consistent with previous work,4,5,9,12,13 the results of this study show that low SEP at birth is associated with adverse behavioral CVD risk factors (smoking, binge drinking, and being overweight) independent of adult social class and income. These associations are sometimes regarded as commonplace, but they are in fact remarkable. Simply on the basis of knowledge of the occupation of a participants father at the time of the participants birth, one could have predicted whether this individual would be likely to smoke, engage in binge drinking, and be overweight 40 years after he or she took part in the initial survey in 1962. The present associations between SEP at birth and smoking and binge drinking were largely explained by educational attainment. Adjustment for educational attainment also importantly attenuated the association between childhood SEP and being overweight in adulthood.
Study Limitations Similarly, for the role of education in this association to be exaggerated by response bias, one would have to assume that among nonresponders the association between low SEP at birth and low educational attainment or the association between low educational attainment and adult risk behaviors was nonexistent or in the opposite direction from that among responders. While we cannot rule out these possibilities, they seem unlikely. A strength of this study is the use of a measure of childhood SEP assessed at study initiation rather than one retrospectively reported in adulthood. However, a weakness is that we included only 1 measure of childhood SEP: fathers social class. Such a single measure is unlikely to encompass the entire spectrum of childhood social circumstances, and its effect on adult risk factorsand, therefore, our resultsmay have led to underestimations of the true magnitude of this association. Our measure of adult income was based on individuals rather than households. Among women in particular, this may not reflect true disposable income, because individuals with spouses will vary widely in regard to household income. This may explain the interactions between gender and income that we observed in the case of some of the outcomes. To address this issue, we included an interaction term between gender and income in the multivariate models. Adult body mass index was determined from self-reported weight and height, which have been shown to be strongly correlated with direct measurements.2527 However, despite these strong correlations, indicative that self-reports and direct measurements result in similar height and weight values, individuals who are obese tend to underestimate their body mass index. 2527 If this systematic misreporting of weight was similar across social class groups in our study, it would have tended to dilute rather than exaggerate the magnitude of the associations observed. Any variations in misreporting according to social class could have biased our results in either direction. We found that participants who indicated not using scales to estimate their weight reported slightly lower weights on average, and this difference did not vary according to childhood or adult social class. This result provided some evidence that misreporting of weight did not differ according to social class. Data on parental smoking were not collected during the original survey, so we relied on information obtained from the 20002002 questionnaire. If there were no differences in misreporting with respect to social class at birth, our results may have underestimated the effects of parental smoking on the association between social class at birth and adult CVD risk factors. This may in part explain why adjustment for adult smoking had very little effect on the association between social class at birth and smoking in adulthood. The participants in this cohort are too young to have experienced a sufficient number of CVD events to allow determination of the pathways between childhood SEP and adult disease events. However, by continuing to conduct follow-ups with these individuals, we will be able to obtain important information on the roles of cognitive functioning, educational attainment, and CVD risk factors in the associations between childhood SEP and risk of CVD in adulthood.
Public Health Implications The role of educational attainment in the association between childhood SEP and adult behaviors could be explained via a number of pathways. Educational attainment will itself be influenced by childhood SEP, and its effect on the association between social class at birth and adult behaviors may indicate its value as a measure of childhood SEP. The association between social class at birth and childhood growth and height was stronger than that between education and childhood growth, suggesting that our measure of social class at birth was a better indicator of childhood socioeconomic circumstances than educational attainment. Educational attainment is associated with adult occupation and income, and thus it may reflect the availability of material resources, which are thought to be important determinants of health outcomes.32 We found that neither adult social class nor income fully explained the associations between childhood social class and adult risk factors, whereas education did explain these associations. Income is arguably the best single indicator of material living standards, but there is some evidence in the United Kingdom that survey participants may be reluctant to provide information on income and that, when they do, the information is inaccurate33; however, this observation has been disputed.34 Our results suggest that, rather than material resources, other factors related to higher educational achievement most likely explain the association between childhood SEP and behavioral risk factors in adulthood. The sociocultural characteristics of those at higher educational levels, for example self-confidence and ability to access and understand health promotional materials, may be relevant. Moreover, peoples behaviors with respect to tobacco and alcohol consumption, diet, and physical activity, which will affect their body mass index, are likely to be influenced by their peers. Educational experiences will determine ones peers at the sensitive life course periods (late adolescence and early adulthood) during which these behaviors tend to be adopted. In conclusion, we have shown that childhood SEP is associated with adult CVD risk factors. It is notable that the fathers occupation when participants were born could have predicted which participants were most likely to be smokers and indulge in other risky behaviors in adulthood. Educational attainment appears to largely explain these associations. Our findings suggest that programs aimed at improving educational attainment may be important in enhancing health behaviors and therefore reducing CVD risk.
The Aberdeen Children of the 1950s Study was funded as a component project of the Medical Research Council (grant G0828205). Debbie A. Lawlor was funded by a United Kingdom Department of Health Career Scientist Award, and G. David Batty was supported by a fellowship from the University of Copenhagen. We are very grateful to Raymond Illsley for providing us with the data from the Aberdeen Child Development Survey and for his advice about the study. Graeme Ford played a crucial role in identifying individual cohort members and in helping us initiate the process of revitalizing the cohort. Doris Campbell, George Davey Smith, Marion Hall, Bianca de Stavola, David Godden, Di Kuh, Glyn Lewis, and Viveca Östberg collaborated with the authors to revitalize the cohort. Margaret Beveridge assisted in study management. We also thank staff at the Information and Statistics Division (Edinburgh), the General Regional Office (Scotland), and the National Health Service Central Register (Southport, England) for their substantial contributions and John Lemon, who undertook the linkage to the Aberdeen Maternity and Neonatal Databank. Finally, we thank the study participants who responded to a mailed questionnaire 40 years after the original survey was completed. Note. The views expressed in this article are those of the authors and not necessarily those of any funding body.
Human Participant Protection
Peer Reviewed
Contributors Accepted for publication July 13, 2004.
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