4.3 Article

Investigating the Relationship between Parental Education, Asthma and Rhinitis in Children Using Path Analysis

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijerph192114551

Keywords

asthma; rhinitis; structural equation modelling; prenatal education; children

Funding

  1. Azienda Sanitaria Locale Mantova
  2. province of Mantova

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Parental socioeconomic position has an impact on a child's health, especially when parents have low education. The study found that low parental education directly affected family characteristics and exposure to passive smoking. It also indirectly influenced children's asthma and allergic rhinitis through maternal smoking during pregnancy and early environmental tobacco smoke.
Parental socioeconomic position (SEP) is a known determinant of a child's health. We aimed to investigate whether a low parental education, as proxy of SEP, has a direct effect on physician-diagnosed asthma, current asthma and current allergic rhinitis in children, or whether associations are mediated by exposure to other personal or environmental risk factors. This study was a secondary data analysis of two cross-sectional studies conducted in Italy in 2006. Data from 2687 adolescents (10-14 years) were analyzed by a path analysis model using generalized structural equation modelling. Significant direct effects were found between parental education and family characteristics (number of children (coefficient = 0.6229, p < 0.001) and crowding index (1.1263, p < 0.001)) as well as with exposure to passive smoke: during pregnancy (maternal: 0.4697, p < 0.001; paternal: 0.4854, p < 0.001), during the first two years of children's life (0.5897, p < 0.001) and currently (0.6998, p < 0.001). An indirect effect of parental education was found on physician-diagnosed asthma in children mediated by maternal smoking during pregnancy (0.2350, p < 0.05) and on current allergic rhinitis mediated by early environmental tobacco smoke (0.2002; p < 0.05). These results suggest the importance of promotion of ad-hoc health policies for promoting smoking cessation, especially during pregnancy.

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