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Linking Early Social Risks to Impaired Physical Health during the Transition to Adulthood
67
Citations
34
References
2003
Year
Young Adult DevelopmentSocial DeterminantsSocial DisadvantageSocial Determinants Of HealthAdolescencePhysical HealthSocial HealthEarlier Social DisadvantagePublic HealthEarly Life ExposureHealth SciencesHealth PolicyHealth PromotionYoung Adult MedicineSocial ConditionPsychosocial FactorImpaired Physical HealthAdolescent DevelopmentPresent Longitudinal StudyHealth ConditionsEarly Social RisksBiological EmbeddingHealth BehaviorSocial Epidemiology
The present longitudinal study of 485 youth used structural equation models to investigate the ways in which a combination of social disadvantage in the family of origin and adolescent maladjustment increases risk for physical health difficulties during adulthood. The study examined a theoretical model that proposes that disruptions in the transition to adulthood mediate the effect of earlier social disadvantage and adolescent maladjustment on young adult physical health status. Results show that early risk factors initiate a sequence of negative influences on young adult physical health through early entry into family responsibility, truncated educational attainment, and poor occupational and economic status. These associations prevailed even after controlling for physical health status during adolescence.
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