How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study

Smoking contributes to health inequalities, but how social inequalities in smoking develop in early life remains unclear. This study examines how measures of education attained over the early life course (representing socioeconomic position of origin, socioeconomic position of destination, and in-be...

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Main Authors: Laura Wells, Viveca Östberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-09-01
Series:SSM: Population Health
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001348
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spelling doaj-36896e6093b243dcb394e21d507625462021-10-01T05:02:18ZengElsevierSSM: Population Health2352-82732021-09-0115100859How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal studyLaura Wells0Viveca Östberg1Corresponding author.; Department of Public Health Sciences, Stockholm University, SE-106 91, Stockholm, SwedenDepartment of Public Health Sciences, Stockholm University, SE-106 91, Stockholm, SwedenSmoking contributes to health inequalities, but how social inequalities in smoking develop in early life remains unclear. This study examines how measures of education attained over the early life course (representing socioeconomic position of origin, socioeconomic position of destination, and in-between) contribute to smoking behavior in a Swedish longitudinal sample. We used data obtained from the Swedish Level-of-Living Surveys in addition to national register data. Young adults (aged 20–28, n = 749) self-reported their educational attainment and smoking behavior (initiation and cessation) in 2010. Ten years earlier, their parents self-reported their own education and smoking behavior. We used linked register data on school performance in adolescence (in grade 9). Logistic regression models showed that lower parental education, lower adolescent school performance, and low young adult educational attainment were respectively associated with young adult smoking initiation. The association between parental education and young adult smoking initiation was explained by adolescent school performance and not parental smoking. Young adult smoking cessation was associated with high parental education and high adolescent school performance (marks in the top quartile), but only school performance remained significant in the final model, which included all measures of education and parental smoking. Results suggest that school performance in adolescence (which connects adolescents’ socioeconomic position of origin with their destination) may play an important role in how educational disparities in smoking form over the life course.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001348Young adultsEducationSchool performanceSocioeconomic positionSmokingLife course
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura Wells
Viveca Östberg
spellingShingle Laura Wells
Viveca Östberg
How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
SSM: Population Health
Young adults
Education
School performance
Socioeconomic position
Smoking
Life course
author_facet Laura Wells
Viveca Östberg
author_sort Laura Wells
title How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
title_short How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
title_full How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
title_fullStr How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
title_full_unstemmed How do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? A Swedish longitudinal study
title_sort how do educational disparities in smoking develop during early life? a swedish longitudinal study
publisher Elsevier
series SSM: Population Health
issn 2352-8273
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Smoking contributes to health inequalities, but how social inequalities in smoking develop in early life remains unclear. This study examines how measures of education attained over the early life course (representing socioeconomic position of origin, socioeconomic position of destination, and in-between) contribute to smoking behavior in a Swedish longitudinal sample. We used data obtained from the Swedish Level-of-Living Surveys in addition to national register data. Young adults (aged 20–28, n = 749) self-reported their educational attainment and smoking behavior (initiation and cessation) in 2010. Ten years earlier, their parents self-reported their own education and smoking behavior. We used linked register data on school performance in adolescence (in grade 9). Logistic regression models showed that lower parental education, lower adolescent school performance, and low young adult educational attainment were respectively associated with young adult smoking initiation. The association between parental education and young adult smoking initiation was explained by adolescent school performance and not parental smoking. Young adult smoking cessation was associated with high parental education and high adolescent school performance (marks in the top quartile), but only school performance remained significant in the final model, which included all measures of education and parental smoking. Results suggest that school performance in adolescence (which connects adolescents’ socioeconomic position of origin with their destination) may play an important role in how educational disparities in smoking form over the life course.
topic Young adults
Education
School performance
Socioeconomic position
Smoking
Life course
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2352827321001348
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