PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

Validation of a theoretically motivated approach to measuring childhood socioeconomic circumstances in the Health and Retirement Study.

  • Anusha M Vable,
  • Paola Gilsanz,
  • Thu T Nguyen,
  • Ichiro Kawachi,
  • M Maria Glymour

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0185898
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 10
p. e0185898

Abstract

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Childhood socioeconomic status (cSES) is a powerful predictor of adult health, but its operationalization and measurement varies across studies. Using Health and Retirement Study data (HRS, which is nationally representative of community-residing United States adults aged 50+ years), we specified theoretically-motivated cSES measures, evaluated their reliability and validity, and compared their performance to other cSES indices. HRS respondent data (N = 31,169, interviewed 1992-2010) were used to construct a cSES index reflecting childhood social capital (cSC), childhood financial capital (cFC), and childhood human capital (cHC), using retrospective reports from when the respondent was 0.05 vs. < 0.04) than alternative indices. Our cSES measures use latent variable models to handle item-missingness, thereby increasing the sample size available for analysis compared to complete case approaches (N = 15,345 vs. 8,248). Adopting this type of theoretically motivated operationalization of cSES may strengthen the quality of research on the effects of cSES on health outcomes.