4.3 Article

Developmental origins of flatter cortisol rhythms: socioeconomic status and adult cortisol activity

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 4, Pages 458-467

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1002/ajhb.22668

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R01-HD19983A, R01-HD18880, P01-HD28076, R01-HD23182, R01-TW05596, R01-HL085144, R01-DK078150, R01-HD054501, R03TW008133]
  2. Nestle Coordinating Center for Nutrition Research
  3. Wyeth International
  4. The Ford Foundation
  5. The US National Academy of Science
  6. The World Health Organization
  7. The US Agency for International Development
  8. US Agency for International Development via Wellstart International
  9. US Agency for International Development via International Center for Research on Women
  10. US Agency for International Development via Family Health International
  11. US Agency for International Development via MEASURE
  12. The Asian Development Bank
  13. The World Bank
  14. The Thrasher Research Fund
  15. The Mellon Foundation
  16. Nestle Research Foundation
  17. The Carolina Population Center
  18. Institute for Policy Research at Northwestern University
  19. Alumnae Dissertation Fellowship of Northwestern University
  20. American Psychological Association Division 38 Graduate Student Research Award

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ObjectiveLow socioeconomic status (SES) is associated with increased psychosocial stress among low-income persons, which could contribute to differences in activity of the HPA axis (assessed by diurnal cortisol profiles). The current article investigates associations of SES from different developmental stages with cortisol profiles. MethodsUsing data from a large, socioeconomically diverse birth cohort (N=1,490) in Cebu, Philippines, the current study compares the relative and joint contributions of SES from five developmental periods, between the prenatal/birth period and early adulthood, to adult cortisol, and examines the effects of chronic exposure to low SES. ResultsChronically low SES from infancy through early adulthood predicts the highest bedtime cortisol levels, lowest cortisol awakening responses (CARs), lowest total cortisol levels across the day (area under curve or AUC), and the flattest cortisol rhythms between wake up and bedtime, a profile associated with poorer health. Results indicate that cumulative economic strain (between the prenatal period and early adulthood) predicts flatter cortisol rhythms more consistently than SES from any particular period. ConclusionInterventions focusing on the psychosocial stressors associated with economic deprivation during any period from infancy to adulthood may be helpful, but targeting interventions across multiple periods may have the greatest impact. Interventions aimed at improving economic conditions between infancy and early adulthood may have implications for long-term changes in HPA axis functioning. Am. J. Hum. Biol. 27:458-467, 2015. (c) 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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