4.4 Article

Socioeconomic Disparities and Health: Impacts and Pathways

期刊

JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
卷 22, 期 1, 页码 2-6

出版社

JAPAN EPIDEMIOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.2188/jea.JE20110116

关键词

income inequality; social determinants; economic crisis; socioeconomic status; aged; Japan

资金

  1. Japan Foundation for the Promotion of International Medical Research Cooperation
  2. Social Science Research Council
  3. American Council for Learned Societies
  4. Japan Foundation Center for Global Partnership
  5. Pfizer Health Research Foundation
  6. Univers Foundation
  7. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan
  8. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Japan
  9. University of Yamanashi
  10. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22119504] Funding Source: KAKEN

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Growing socioeconomic disparity is a global concern, as it could affect population health. The author and colleagues have investigated the health impacts of socioeconomic disparities as well as the pathways that underlie those disparities. Our meta-analysis found that a large population has risks of mortality and poor self-rated health that are attributable to income inequality. The study results also suggested the existence of threshold effects (ie, a threshold of income inequality over which the adverse impacts on health increase), period effects (ie, the potential for larger impacts in later years, specifically after the 1990s), and lag effects between income inequality and health outcomes. Our other studies using Japanese national representative survey data and a large-scale cohort study of Japanese older adults (AGES cohort) support the relative deprivation hypothesis, namely, that invidious social comparisons arising from relative deprivation in an unequal society adversely affect health. A study with a natural experiment design found that the socioeconomic gradient in self-rated health might actually have become shallower after the 1997-98 economic crisis in Japan, due to smaller health improvements among middle-class white-collar workers and middle/upper-income workers. In conclusion, income inequality might have adverse impacts on individual health, and psychosocial stress due to relative deprivation may partially explain those impacts. Any study of the effects of macroeconomic fluctuations on health disparities should also consider multiple potential pathways, including expanding income inequality, changes in the labor market, and erosion of social capital. Further studies are needed to attain a better understanding of the social determinants of health in a rapidly changing society.

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