Causal connections between socio-economic status and health: reciprocal effects and mediating mechanisms.

J Health Soc Behav

Section on Socio-Environmental Studies, NIMH, Room B1A-14, Federal Building, Bethesda, MD 20892-9005, USA.

Published: March 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study used structural equation modeling on data from a national survey to investigate how socio-economic status (SES) and health status affect each other over time.
  • It found that higher SES leads to better health outcomes, and better health can improve SES, confirming that both social causation and health selection play roles in health inequalities.
  • The research identified that over one-third of the SES-health relationship is influenced by health-related lifestyles/behaviors and psychosocial distress, with psychological distress being a significant mediator for SES affecting health, while weight and sleep behaviors are more relevant when health impacts SES.

Article Abstract

Using structural equation modeling techniques on data from a nationally representative longitudinal survey, we first explored the reciprocal relationships between socio-economic status (SES) and health status. We then estimated the degree to which health-related lifestyles/behaviors and psychosocial distress are mediating mechanisms of these relationships. As predicted, SES positively affects health, and health positively affects SES. Although the causal path from SES to health is stronger than the reverse, these findings confirmed the hypothesis that both social causation and health selection contribute to social inequalities in health. In terms of the mediating mechanisms through which SES and health affect each other, more than a third of the overall SES-health relationship was accounted for by health-related lifestyles/behaviors and psychosocial distress. A notable part of the effect of SES on health is due to differences in psychological distress, with the effects of health-related lifestyles/behaviors being much smaller. On the other hand, in terms of the effects of health on SES, differences in weight and sleeping behavior are more important than psychological distress.

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