第一代大学毕业生与多代大学毕业生的中年抑郁症状相似

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH Ssm-Population Health Pub Date : 2024-02-16 DOI:10.1016/j.ssmph.2024.101633
Erika Meza , Jillian Hebert , Maria E. Garcia , Jacqueline M. Torres , M. Maria Glymour , Anusha M. Vable
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的较高的教育程度可能会保护个人免受抑郁症状的困扰,然而,童年时期的不利社会经济地位(SES),通常以较低的父母教育程度来衡量,可能会使他们日后出现抑郁症状的风险更高。本研究评估了第一代和多代大学毕业生的中年抑郁症是否相似。方法对于 55-63 岁的美国健康与退休研究(HRS)参与者(N = 16,752),我们根据父母(母亲或父亲的最高学历)和参与者本人的受教育年限(16 年表示大学毕业)定义了 4 个类别:多代(均≥ 16 年:参考);第一代(父母 <16;本人≥ 16);仅父母(父母 ≥ 16;本人 <16);以及三个出生队列中均无大学毕业生(均 <16)。我们使用线性回归评估大学毕业与抑郁症状之间的关系,抑郁症状由 8 个项目的流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D)测量。结果第一代和多代大学毕业生在中年时的抑郁症状平均值相似(β:0.01;95% CI:0.15,0.13)。结论与资源替代理论一致,大学毕业可能会抵消父母教育程度较低对第一代毕业生中年抑郁症状的有害影响。
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First-generation college graduates have similar depressive symptoms in midlife as multi-generational college graduates

Purpose

Higher education may protect an individual against depressive symptoms, yet, disadvantaged socioeconomic status (SES) during childhood, often measured by lower parental education, may put them at higher risk for depressive symptoms later in life. This study evaluates if midlife depression is similar for first-generation and multi-generation college graduates.

Methods

For US Health and Retirement Study (HRS) participants ages 55–63 (N = 16,752), we defined a 4-category exposure from parents' (highest of mother or father's) and participant's own years of education, with 16 years indicating college completion: multi-gen (both 16 years: reference); first-gen (parents <16; own 16); only parent(s) (parents 16; own <16); and neither (both <16) college graduates across three birth cohorts. We used linear regressions to evaluate relationships between college completion and depressive symptoms measured by an 8-item Center for Epidemiologic Studies – Depression (CES-D) scale. Models pooled over time evaluated differences by sex, race/ethnicity, and birthplace.

Results

First-gen and multi-gen college graduates averaged similar depressive symptoms in midlife (β: 0.01; 95% CI: 0.15, 0.13). Results were similar by sex and race/ethnicity.

Conclusion

Consistent with resource substitution theory, college completion may offset the deleterious effects of lower parental education on midlife depressive symptoms for first-generation graduates.

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来源期刊
Ssm-Population Health
Ssm-Population Health PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
2.10%
发文量
298
审稿时长
101 days
期刊介绍: SSM - Population Health. The new online only, open access, peer reviewed journal in all areas relating Social Science research to population health. SSM - Population Health shares the same Editors-in Chief and general approach to manuscripts as its sister journal, Social Science & Medicine. The journal takes a broad approach to the field especially welcoming interdisciplinary papers from across the Social Sciences and allied areas. SSM - Population Health offers an alternative outlet for work which might not be considered, or is classed as ''out of scope'' elsewhere, and prioritizes fast peer review and publication to the benefit of authors and readers. The journal welcomes all types of paper from traditional primary research articles, replication studies, short communications, methodological studies, instrument validation, opinion pieces, literature reviews, etc. SSM - Population Health also offers the opportunity to publish special issues or sections to reflect current interest and research in topical or developing areas. The journal fully supports authors wanting to present their research in an innovative fashion though the use of multimedia formats.
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