» Articles » PMID: 19861467

Health Disparities Beginning in Childhood: a Life-course Perspective

Overview
Journal Pediatrics
Specialty Pediatrics
Date 2009 Oct 29
PMID 19861467
Citations 230
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

In this article we argue for the utility of the life-course perspective as a tool for understanding and addressing health disparities across socioeconomic and racial or ethnic groups, particularly disparities that originate in childhood. Key concepts and terms used in life-course research are briefly defined; as resources, examples of existing literature and the outcomes covered are provided along with examples of longitudinal databases that have often been used for life-course research. The life-course perspective focuses on understanding how early-life experiences can shape health across an entire lifetime and potentially across generations; it systematically directs attention to the role of context, including social and physical context along with biological factors, over time. This approach is particularly relevant to understanding and addressing health disparities, because social and physical contextual factors underlie socioeconomic and racial/ethnic disparities in health. A major focus of life-course epidemiology has been to understand how early-life experiences (particularly experiences related to economic adversity and the social disadvantages that often accompany it) shape adult health, particularly adult chronic disease and its risk factors and consequences. The strong life-course influences on adult health could provide a powerful rationale for policies at all levels--federal, state, and local--to give more priority to investment in improving the living conditions of children as a strategy for improving health and reducing health disparities across the entire life course.

Citing Articles

Kids' Environment and Health Cohort: Database Protocol: supplementary appendix.

Akaraci S, Macfarlane A, Rammah A, Courtin E, Lewis E, Miller F Int J Popul Data Sci. 2025; 10(1):2475.

PMID: 40041099 PMC: 11878347. DOI: 10.23889/ijpds.v10i1.2475.


Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on women in the workplace in the Middle East and North Africa: A scoping review protocol.

Ghezzawi M, Fahme S, Al Sabbagh R, Naalbandian S, DeJong J PLoS One. 2025; 20(2):e0312037.

PMID: 40014602 PMC: 11867327. DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0312037.


Digital Mental Health Screening, Feedback, and Referral System for Teens With Socially Complex Needs: Protocol for a Randomized Controlled Trial Integrating the Teen Assess, Check, and Heal System into Pediatric Primary Care.

Stiles-Shields C, Bobadilla G, Reyes K, Gustafson E, Lowther M, Smith D JMIR Res Protoc. 2025; 14:e65245.

PMID: 39965196 PMC: 11888113. DOI: 10.2196/65245.


Weaker Effects of Educational Attainment on Chronic Medical Conditions in American Indian Alaska Native, Black, and Latino Adults: National Health Interview Survey 2023.

Assari S, Zare H Open J Med Sci. 2025; 5(1).

PMID: 39931521 PMC: 11808385. DOI: 10.31586/ojms.2025.1150.


From one death to another: The relationship between familial deaths and one's own mortality risk among an urban Black American cohort.

Doherty E, Green K, Bugbee B Soc Sci Med. 2024; 363:117489.

PMID: 39550938 PMC: 11622217. DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2024.117489.