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Explaining the Link Between Low Socioeconomic Status and Psychopathology: Testing Two Mechanisms of the Social Causation Hypothesis.
261
Citations
33
References
2005
Year
Social Causation HypothesisSocial PsychologyAdolescent Behavioral HealthMental HealthSocial Determinants Of HealthChild Mental HealthPsychologySocial SciencesSocioemotional DevelopmentCumulative PrevalenceClinical PsychologyYouth Well-beingDifferential IncidenceSocial CausationPsychiatryDepressionAdolescent PsychologyPsychosocial FactorApplied Social PsychologyChildren's Mental HealthPsychosocial IssueSociologyPediatricsAdult Mental HealthMood DisordersMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
Two mechanisms of the hypothesized social causation of psychopathology--differential incidence and cumulative prevalence--were tested over 9 years in a nationally representative sample of 1,075 children and youths, ages 8-17 at Time 1 (1986). Analyses using parental responses on behavior checklists at 4 time points showed significant increases in clinical elevations for those of the lowest socioeconomic status (SES) on anxious/depressed, somatic complaints, thought problems, delinquent, and aggressive syndromes. This SES-linked differential incidence supports the social causation hypothesis that factors associated with SES contribute to variations in levels of psychological problems. SES-linked differential cumulative prevalence was found for withdrawn and somatic complaints; this finding indicates that low-SES cases do not improve as much as do middle- and high-SES cases, which results in greater accumulation of low-SES cases.
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