Printer Friendly Page
VA RESEARCH: POOR HEALTH IN ADULTHOOD LINKED
WITH
PARENTS' EDUCATION LEVEL -- Participants whose
parents
had less than an eighth grade education were
significantly
more likely to have poor or fair health in
adulthood.

For more about VA research, use the VA Watchdog
search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/ses
search.php?q=va+research&op=ph
Story here...
http://pub.ucsf.edu/
newsservices/releases/200709262/
Story below:
-------------------------
Source: Steve Tokar
steve.tokar@ncire.org
415-221-4810
Poor health in adulthood linked with parents' education level
The level of education of one’s parents is a key predictor of adult
health status among members of the white and African-American
communities, according to a study of more than 20 thousand adults aged
50 and older conducted by researchers at the San Francisco VA Medical
Center (SFVAMC).
Participants whose parents had less than an eighth grade education were
significantly more likely to have poor or fair health in adulthood than
participants whose parents had more education, according to the study
authors. “It’s long been observed that lower socioeconomic status in
childhood predicts poor health in adulthood, but this is the first study
to isolate parents’ level of education as a critical predictive factor,”
says lead author Sandra Moody-Ayers, MD, a staff physician and
geriatrician at SFVAMC and an associate professor of medicine at the
University of California, San Francisco (UCSF).
The effect of parents’ education level was observed but much weaker in
Latino participants, notes Moody. The study is available in the online
Advance Access section of the American Journal of Epidemiology:
http://aje.oxfordjournals.org/papbyrecent.dtl
.
The authors studied 20,566 adults aged 50 and older who are participants
in the Health and Retirement Study, an ongoing national prospective
study sponsored by the National Institute on Aging that is examining the
relationship between health, income, and wealth over time. Participants
were asked to report their childhood socioeconomic status based on three
measures: whether their families were poor or not poor; whether their
families had to move as a result of financial hardship; and number of
years of education completed by each parent. They were also asked to
rate their own health status; the authors note that self-rated health
status is strongly predictive of morbidity and mortality.
After controlling for variables including age, gender, race and
ethnicity (white, African-American, and Latino), and current
socioeconomic status, the researchers found that an important predictor
of adult health status was parents’ educational level. This predictive
effect was most pronounced through mid-life and fell off somewhat in old
age.
“This goes a long way toward explaining the long-observed disparity in
health outcomes between whites and non-whites in America,” says Moody.
“Lifelong economic hardship, such as occurs disproportionately among
African-Americans, has a cumulative effect –– at least until the health
problems commonly associated with old age begin to dominate.”
The effect of parental education was statistically significant in white
and African-American participants and observed but much weaker in Latino
participants, notes Moody. The authors do not account for this
difference but speculate that it may be related to the so-called
“Hispanic or Latino Paradox”: Mexican-Americans, who make up the
predominant Latino group in the current study, have been shown in
previous studies to have better health status compared with white and
other ethnic Americans of the same socioeconomic status when they
maintain strong social and familial ties to their communities.
“It’s also possible that the number of Latinos in the study was not high
enough to have statistical power,” Moody speculates. “But it’s
suggestive nonetheless.”
Coauthors of the study were Karla Lindquist, MS, of UCSF, and Saunak Sen,
PhD, and Kenneth E. Covinsky, MD, MPH, of SFVAMC and UCSF. The research
was supported by funds from the Department of Veterans Affairs, the
National Institute on Aging, and the National Institute on Nursing
Research.
SFVAMC has the largest medical research program in the national VA
system, with more than 200 research scientists, all of whom are faculty
members at UCSF.
UCSF is a leading university that advances health worldwide by
conducting advanced biomedical research, educating graduate students in
the life sciences and health professions, and providing complex patient
care.
-------------------------
Larry Scott --