AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent research shows that how individuals perceive their socioeconomic status (SES) on a ladder system is closely linked to their health outcomes, even beyond traditional measurements like income and education.
  • The study explores different ladders measuring respect and social influence, finding that these ladders also relate to behaviors like smoking and exercise, but mainly the traditional U.S. SES ladder predicts health behavior.
  • The findings emphasize the need to investigate factors like physical activity, feelings of respect, and non-behavioral influences on health disparities, as they can provide insights beyond conventional SES measures.

Article Abstract

Efforts to understand the relationship between socioeconomic status (SES) and health have expanded beyond traditional indicators of education, income, occupation, and wealth to individuals' own reports of where they stand. This more contemporary approach has enjoyed considerable success, in that self-reported SES standing, often measured on a ladder representing the entire U.S. socioeconomic hierarchy, is associated strongly with health even when traditional SES indicators are controlled. However, disparities in self-rated health across ladder measures typically are not assessed with regard to health behavior disparities. Here, we draw on two US national probability samples assessing diverse ladder reference groups, as well as a new ladder asking people to report how much respect, honor, or esteem they receive from other people. Respect or honor offers a distinct potential to measure social influence across circles of recognition. We find that U.S.-based ladder status is related to smoking currently or ever and to days of exercise. While friend, neighbor, and respect-based ladders do not relate to health behaviors net of U.S. ladder standing, they show relationships to ever smoking and physical activity, and self-rated health, in their own right. Physical activity accounts for 12-18% of self-rated health disparities by friend, neighbor, or country ladder status. Smoking and drinking do not robustly contribute to ladder-based disparities in self-rated health. Contrasting what is typically found for traditional SES measures, physical activity merits further research, as does the receipt of respect or honor. That status ladder health disparities go largely unexplained by behaviors suggests the potential roles of non-behavioral pathways including inflammation, hopelessness, or classism.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117396DOI Listing

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