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Social Change and Socioeconomic Disparities in Health over the Life Course in China: A Cohort Analysis

机译:中国生命历程中健康方面的社会变化和社会经济差异:队列分析

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This article examines social stratification in individual health trajectories for multiple cohorts in the context of China's dramatically changing macro-social environment. Using data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey, we find significant socioeconomic status (SES) differences in the mean level of health and that these SES differentials generally diverge over the life course. We also find strong cohort variations in SES disparities in the mean levels of health and health trajectories. The effect of education on health slightly decreases across successive cohorts. By contrast, the income gap in health trajectories diverges for earlier cohorts but converges for most recent cohorts. Both effects are more pronounced in rural areas. Given that these cohort effects are opposite those reported in recent U.S. studies, we discuss China's unique social, economic, and political settings. We highlight the association between SES and health behaviors, China's stage of epidemiologic transition, and the changing power of the state government and its implications for health care. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
机译:本文研究了在中国急剧变化的宏观社会环境下,多个人群的个人健康轨迹中的社会分层。使用来自中国健康与营养调查的数据,我们发现平均健康水平存在显着的社会经济状况(SES)差异,并且这些SES差异在整个生命过程中通常存在差异。我们还发现,在健康状况和健康轨迹的平均水平上,SES差异存在明显的队列差异。在连续的队列研究中,教育对健康的影响略有下降。相比之下,健康轨迹的收入差距在较早的人群中有所不同,但在最近的人群中有所收敛。两种影响在农村地区更为明显。鉴于这些队列效应与美国最近的研究结果相反,我们将讨论中国独特的社会,经济和政治环境。我们强调了SES与健康行为之间的关联,中国的流行病学转变阶段,州政府不断变化的权力及其对医疗保健的影响。 [出版物摘要]

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    《American Sociological Review》 |2010年第1期|p.126-150|共25页
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    Feinian Chen,a Yang Yang,b and Guangya Liu(a)a North Carolina State Universityb University of ChicagoCorresponding Author:Feinian Chen, North Carolina State University, Department of Sociology and Anthropology, Campus Box 8107, Raleigh, NC 27695, USAE-mail: feinian chen@ncsu.eduFeinian Chen is Associate Professor of Sociology at North Carolina State University. She will join the Department of Sociology at The University of Maryland in fall 2010. Her primary research interests are intergenerational relationships, family structures and dynamics, and their implications for health and aging processes in transitional societies. Her current research project investigates the phenomenon of grandparents caring for grandchildren in China.Yang Yang is Assistant Professor of Sociology and research associate of the Population Research Center and the Center on Aging at NORC at the University of Chicago. Her research interests include social heterogeneity in aging and life course trajectories of health and comorbidity, mortality and fertility declines in the twenty-first century, new models and methods for cohort analysis, and integrative sociodemographic and biological approaches to explaining social differentials in health and longevity.Guangya Liu is a graduate student in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology at North Carolina State University. Her research focuses on health, family, aging, and intergenerational relations. Her articles have recently appeared in the American Journal of Public Health, International Handbook of the Demography of Aging, Social Science and Medicine, and International Aging and Human Development.;

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