Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories

Am J Public Health. 2009 Aug 20. [Epub ahead of print]Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories.Kozyrskyj AL, Kendall GE, Jacoby P, Sly PD, Zubrick SR.University of Alberta.Objectives. Using data on 2868 children born in the Western Austr...

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Main Authors: Kozyrskyj, A., Kendall, Garth, Jacoby, P., Sly, Peter, Zubrick, Stephen
Format: Journal Article
Published: American Public Health Association 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25368
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author Kozyrskyj, A.
Kendall, Garth
Jacoby, P.
Sly, Peter
Zubrick, Stephen
author_facet Kozyrskyj, A.
Kendall, Garth
Jacoby, P.
Sly, Peter
Zubrick, Stephen
author_sort Kozyrskyj, A.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Am J Public Health. 2009 Aug 20. [Epub ahead of print]Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories.Kozyrskyj AL, Kendall GE, Jacoby P, Sly PD, Zubrick SR.University of Alberta.Objectives. Using data on 2868 children born in the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study, we examined the association between changes in family socioeconomic status and childhood asthma.Methods. We determined the likelihood (odds ratio) of a child having asthma at ages 6 and 14 years for 4 family-income trajectories (chronic low, increasing, decreasing, and never low) over the child's lifetime. The trajectories were created from longitudinal latent-class models.Results. We found a 2-fold increased risk of asthma at age 14 years among children who had lived in a low-income family since birth, especially for girls. Asthma was less likely to occur in children born to single parents; income rose over time in many of these families. Compared with children in chronic low-income families, children in households with increasing incomes had a 60% lower risk of asthma. Single-point measures of low income were not found to be associated with asthma.Conclusions. Chronic exposure to a low-income environment from birth was associated with the development of persistent asthma. There was also a protective effect against asthma among those children whose families had moved out of poverty.PMID: 19696386 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-253682018-03-29T09:09:25Z Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories Kozyrskyj, A. Kendall, Garth Jacoby, P. Sly, Peter Zubrick, Stephen Am J Public Health. 2009 Aug 20. [Epub ahead of print]Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories.Kozyrskyj AL, Kendall GE, Jacoby P, Sly PD, Zubrick SR.University of Alberta.Objectives. Using data on 2868 children born in the Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort (Raine) Study, we examined the association between changes in family socioeconomic status and childhood asthma.Methods. We determined the likelihood (odds ratio) of a child having asthma at ages 6 and 14 years for 4 family-income trajectories (chronic low, increasing, decreasing, and never low) over the child's lifetime. The trajectories were created from longitudinal latent-class models.Results. We found a 2-fold increased risk of asthma at age 14 years among children who had lived in a low-income family since birth, especially for girls. Asthma was less likely to occur in children born to single parents; income rose over time in many of these families. Compared with children in chronic low-income families, children in households with increasing incomes had a 60% lower risk of asthma. Single-point measures of low income were not found to be associated with asthma.Conclusions. Chronic exposure to a low-income environment from birth was associated with the development of persistent asthma. There was also a protective effect against asthma among those children whose families had moved out of poverty.PMID: 19696386 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25368 10.2105/AJPH.2008.150771 American Public Health Association restricted
spellingShingle Kozyrskyj, A.
Kendall, Garth
Jacoby, P.
Sly, Peter
Zubrick, Stephen
Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title_full Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title_fullStr Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title_full_unstemmed Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title_short Association Between Socioeconomic Status and the Development of Asthma: Analyses of Income Trajectories
title_sort association between socioeconomic status and the development of asthma: analyses of income trajectories
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25368