CommentNew trends in health inequalities research: now it's personal
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Diverging death risks: Mortality as a corollary of economic, social, cultural and person capital
2024, SSM - Population HealthSubjective social status and allostatic load among older people in England: A longitudinal analysis
2023, Social Science and MedicineA capital-based approach to better understand health inequalities: Theoretical and empirical explorations
2023, SSM - Population HealthCitation Excerpt :Finally, we observed that an extension of the person capital with attractiveness and personality capital, i.e. attractiveness and personality, led to a further strengthening of the association between resources and health. In modern societies, social class is associated with individual personal characteristics, which may affect health (Mackenbach, 2010). The addition of attractiveness and personality capital adds insight into the role of psychological attributes and personal traits in explaining socioeconomic differences in health (de Graaf et al., 2012).
Does perceived social mobility affect health? Evidence from a fixed effects approach
2022, Social Science and MedicineEarly life programming of adult ischemic heart disease within and across generations: The role of the socioeconomic context
2021, Social Science and MedicineThe roles of non-cognitive and cognitive skills in the life course development of adult health inequalities
2019, Social Science and MedicineCitation Excerpt :Some researchers have suggested that child cognitive ability may have an important role in the production of health inequalities due to its robust association with adult socioeconomic attainment, physical health, mental health and mortality (Deary et al., 2008; Gottfredson, 2004; Hatch et al., 2007b). One meta-analysis reported that cognitive skill had correlations in the range of 0.40–0.55 with education and occupational attainment, with other research suggesting that intelligence might explain between 20 and 50% of the socioeconomic gradient in health (Mackenbach, 2010; Strenze, 2007). However, cognitive skill alone is unlikely to explain inequalities in health, particularly as research has shown that educational attainment still independently predicts later health even taking account of cognitive ability (Hatch et al., 2007b; Link et al., 2008; Richards and Deary, 2010).