Stress and Resource Pathways Connecting Early Socioeconomic Adversity to Young Adults’ Physical Health Risk
Autor: | Josephine A. Kwon, Catherine Walker O'Neal, Kandauda A. S. Wickrama, Tae Kyoung Lee |
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Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Adolescent Social Psychology Health Status Adolescent Health Poison control Suicide prevention Occupational safety and health Education Young Adult Metabolic Diseases Environmental health Injury prevention Developmental and Educational Psychology Humans Early childhood Child Socioeconomic status Adolescent Development Health psychology Socioeconomic Factors Cardiovascular Diseases Female Psychology Biomarkers Stress Psychological Social Sciences (miscellaneous) Adolescent health |
Zdroj: | Journal of Youth and Adolescence. 44:1109-1124 |
ISSN: | 1573-6601 0047-2891 |
Popis: | Although research has established the impact of early stress, including stressful life contexts, and early resources, such as educational attainment, on various adolescent health outcomes, previous research has not adequately investigated "integrative models" incorporating both stress and resource mediational pathways to explain how early socioeconomic adversity impacts physical health outcomes, particularly in early life stages. Data on early childhood/adolescent stress and socioeconomic resources as well as biomarkers indicating physical health status in young adulthood were collected from 11,798 respondents (54 % female) over a 13-year period from youth participating in the National Study of Adolescent Health (Add Health). Physical health risk in young adulthood was measured using a composite index of nine regulatory biomarkers of cardiovascular and metabolic systems. Heterogeneity in stress and socioeconomic resource pathways was assessed using latent class analysis to identify clusters, or classes, of stress and socioeconomic resource trajectories. The influence of early socioeconomic adversity on young adults' physical health risk, as measured by biomarkers, was estimated, and the role of stress and socioeconomic resource trajectory classes as linking mechanisms was assessed. There was evidence for the influence of early socioeconomic adversity on young adults' physical health risk directly and indirectly through stress and socioeconomic resource trajectory classes over the early life course. These findings suggest that health models should be broadened to incorporate both stress and resource experiences simultaneously. Furthermore, these findings have prevention and intervention implications, including the importance of early socioeconomic adversity and key intervention points for "turning" the trajectories of at-risk youth. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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