Authors
Sheldon Cohen, Denise Janicki‐Deverts, Edith Chen, Karen A Matthews
Publication date
2010/2
Journal
Annals of the new York Academy of Sciences
Volume
1186
Issue
1
Pages
37-55
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc
Description
Socioeconomic status (SES) exposures during childhood are powerful predictors of adult cardiovascular morbidity, cardiovascular mortality, all‐cause mortality, and mortality due to a range of specific causes. However, we still know little about when childhood SES exposures matter most, how long they need to last, what behavioral, psychological, or physiological pathways link the childhood SES experience to adult health, and which specific adult health outcomes are vulnerable to childhood SES exposures. Here, we discuss the evidence supporting the link between childhood and adolescent SES and adult health, and explore different environmental, behavioral, and physiological pathways that might explain how early SES would influence adult health. We also address the ages when SES exposures matter most for setting adult health trajectories as well as the role of exposure duration in SES influences on later …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
S Cohen, D Janicki‐Deverts, E Chen, KA Matthews - Annals of the new York Academy of Sciences, 2010