Socioeconomic Position in Childhood and Early Adult Life and Risk of Mortality: A Prospective Study of the Mothers of the 1958 British Birth Cohort
Chris Power 1*,Elina Hyppönen 1,George Davey Smith 2
1 Institute of Child Health 2 Bristol University
* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: c.power{at}ich.ucl.ac.uk.
Abstract
Objectives. We sought to establish whether women's childhoodsocioeconomic
position influenced their risk of mortality separatelyfrom the effects of adult
socioeconomic position.
Methods. Weexamined 11855 British women aged 14 to 49 years, with mortalityfollow-up over a 45-year period.
Results. Trends according tochildhood social class were observed for all-cause
mortality,circulatory disease, coronary heart disease, respiratory disease,chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, stroke, lung cancer,and stomach cancer, with higher death rates among members ofunskilled manual groups. Associations attenuated after adjustmentfor adult social class, smoking, and body mass index. No trendwas seen for breast cancer or accidents and violence. Adversesocial conditions in both childhood and adulthood were associatedwith higher death rates from coronary heart disease and respiratorydisease. Stomach cancer was influenced primarily by childhoodconditions and lung cancer by factors in adult life.
Conclusions.Socioeconomic position in childhood was associated with adult
mortalityin a large sample of British women.
Key Words:
Chronic Disease, Epidemiology, Socioeconomic Factors, Mortality, Women's Health
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