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Lower Socioeconomic Status and Increased Mortality
Early Childhood Roots and the Potential for Successful Interventions
Redford B. Williams, MD
JAMA. 1998;279:1745-1746.
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Lower socioeconomic status (SES) is probably the most powerful single contributor to premature morbidity and mortality, not only in the United States but worldwide. Since lower SES groups are more likely to engage in a number of risky health behaviors, it has been tempting to assume that these behaviors are responsible for the health problems that mount as SES decreasesand to draw the logical conclusion that simply by bringing about a reduction in these risky behaviors, the health problems associated with lower SES will disappear. Unfortunately for this hypothesis, as Lantz et al1 show quite convincingly in this issue of THE JOURNAL, 4 important health behaviorssmoking, alcohol consumption, body mass index, and physical activity levelexplain no more than a modest "12% to 13% of the predictive effect of income on mortality." By incorporating in this study a nationally representative longitudinal sample with both men and women, . . . [Full Text of this Article]
From the Departments of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and Medicine, and the Behavioral Medicine Research Center, Duke University Medical Center, and the Department of Psychology, Duke University, Durham, NC.
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