4.7 Article

Distal and variably proximal causes: Education, obesity, and health

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 73, Issue 9, Pages 1340-1348

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2011.08.010

Keywords

Risk factor accumulation; Obesity; Socioeconomic status (SES); Education gradient; Health inequality; C-reactive protein; Disability; USA

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Medical sociologists hold that social conditions generate disparities across a host of health conditions through exposure to a variety of more proximate risk factors. Though distal and proximal causes jointly influence disease, the nature of risk accumulation may differ appreciably by the link of a proximal cause to the outcome in question. This paper employs a representative sample of over 3000 American older adults to examine whether position in the educational gradient amplifies the effect of obesity on two health outcomes. Results indicate that educational inequalities amplify the effect of high body mass index on disability (unstandardized coefficients across education groups range from -.05 [ns] to.26 [p < .01] among overweight respondents yet reach .17 [ns] to .73 [p < .001] among severely obese adults), but fail to amplify the consequences of severe obesity in the case of C-reactive protein (CRP) levels. Instead, educational gradients in CRP are most pronounced at lower levels of body mass. Sex-specific analyses further clarify these patterns, as the connections between CRP and body mass are particularly strong among women. We conclude that risk accumulation processes differ based on the proximity of causes to the health outcome under examination. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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