Incarceration is high among any population who
experience socioeconomic disadvantage, and who have complex health needs.
First, our results indicate that groups of children exposed to different adverse experiences do not necessarily overlap; for example, most of the children experiencing maltreatment or social isolation did not
experience socioeconomic disadvantage.
The social foundations of children's mental and physical health and well - being are threatened by climate change because of: effects of sea level rise and decreased biologic diversity on the economic viability of agriculture, tourism, and indigenous communities; water scarcity and famine; mass migrations; decreased global stability46; and potentially increased violent conflict.47 These effects will likely be greatest for communities already
experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage.48
Children who had
experienced socioeconomic disadvantage (incidence rate ratio, 1.89; 95 % confidence interval, 1.36 - 2.62), maltreatment (1.81; 1.38 - 2.38), or social isolation (1.87; 1.38 - 2.51) had elevated age - related - disease risks in adulthood.
This longitudinal - prospective study suggests that children
experiencing socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, or social isolation are more likely to present risk factors for age - related disease in adulthood, such as depression, inflammation, and the clustering of metabolic risk factors.
Not exact matches
«The fact that economic
disadvantage is so often a part of the
experience of minorities in the U.S. has made it difficult to estimate the relative effects of race and
socioeconomic status on behaviors that impact health,» says Thorpe.
«People that have a more
disadvantaged socioeconomic status tend to have less satisfying and less safe sexual relations, as well as suffering more
experiences of sexual abuse.
Discussing educational
disadvantage, it cites 2015 research suggesting many students are not able to access «taster» work
experience for a variety of reasons — including gender, disability, cultural background and
socioeconomic status.
Conducted by Kemp et al, 18 MECSH recruited 208 participants from Miller, a Sydney suburb known for
experiencing significant
socioeconomic disadvantage.
During their first decade of life, study members were assessed for exposure to 3 adverse psychosocial
experiences:
socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation.
Second, as the severity of childhood
socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation increased, the number of age - related - disease risks at age 32 years also increased; that is, each adverse childhood
experience independently predicted a greater number of age - related - disease risks at age 32 years in a dose - response fashion (Table 3, panel 2).
Children living in
socioeconomic disadvantage are more likely to
experience cognitive delays and emotional problems (Brooks - Gunn and Duncan, 1997), but the underlying causal pathways between
disadvantage and developmental outcomes are not clear.
Main Exposures During their first decade of life, study members were assessed for exposure to 3 adverse psychosocial
experiences:
socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation.
Longitudinal associations of
experiences of adversity and
socioeconomic disadvantage during childhood with labour force participation and exit in later adulthood.
Third, we focused our analyses on childhood
socioeconomic disadvantage, maltreatment, and social isolation because previous research suggested a link between these measures and age - related disease.24, 31,33 However, children may be exposed to other significant adverse
experiences, and research is needed to uncover them.
Association between children's
experience of
socioeconomic disadvantage and adult health: a life - course study
Aboriginal Australians
experience multiple social and health
disadvantages from the prenatal period onwards.1 Infant2 and child3 mortality rates are higher among Aboriginal children, as are well - established influences on poor health, cognitive and education outcomes, 4 — 6 including premature birth and low birth weight, 7 — 9 being born to teenage mothers7 and
socioeconomic disadvantage.1, 8 Addressing Aboriginal early life
disadvantage is of particular importance because of the high birth rate among Aboriginal people10 and subsequent young age structure of the Aboriginal population.11 Recent population estimates suggest that children under 10 years of age account for almost a quarter of the Aboriginal population compared with only 12 % of the non-Aboriginal population of Australia.11