4.4 Article

Socioeconomic position and mental health problems in pre- and early-adolescents

Journal

SOCIAL PSYCHIATRY AND PSYCHIATRIC EPIDEMIOLOGY
Volume 44, Issue 3, Pages 231-238

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00127-008-0424-z

Keywords

socioeconomic position; adolescents; gender; mental health problems

Categories

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research NWO [GB-MW 940-38-011]
  2. ZonMW Brainpower [100-001-004]
  3. ZonMw Risk Behavior and Dependence [60-60600-98-018, 6060600- 97-118]
  4. ZonMw Culture and Health [261-98-710]
  5. Social Sciences Council medium-sized investment [GB-MaGW 48001- 006, GB-MaGW 480-07-001]
  6. Social Sciences Council project [GB-MaGW 457-03-018, GB-MaGW 452-04-314, GBMaGW 452-06-004]
  7. NWO [175.010.2003.005]
  8. Sophia Foundation for Medical Research
  9. Dutch Ministry of Justice (WODC)

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Family socioeconomic position (SEP) is known to be associated with adolescent mental health. Whether the relationship is different for different mental health dimensions is unknown. Using a cross-sectional design, we investigated the differential effects of family SEP on multiple mental health dimensions in preadolescents (N = 2230, baseline age 10-12, 49% boys) using reports from multiple informants (parent, self, and teachers). A score equal to or higher than the 85th percentile (averaged across informants) defined mental health problems. SEP was inversely associated with all dimensions. Compared to high SEP, the odds ratios (OR) for externalizing problems were 3.88 (95% confidence interval (CI): 2.56, 5.90) and 2.05 (CI: 1.34, 3.14) for low and intermediate SEP, respectively. For internalizing problems, they were 1.86 (CI: 1.28, 2.70) and 1.37 (CI: 0.94, 2.00), respectively. When adjusted for externalizing problems, SEP effects on internalizing problems materially attenuated (OR: 1.47, CI: 0.78, 1.68 and OR: 1.34, CI: 0.91, 1.96) while the converse was less pronounced (OR: 3.39, CI: 2.24, 5.15) and (OR: 1.91, CI: 1.25, 2.94). In early adolescence, the risk of mental health problems increases with decreasing SEP, particularly for externalizing problems. Further, the SEP-internalizing problems relationship is partly explained by shared aspects with externalizing problems.

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