Agency and Subjective Health from Early Adulthood to Mid-Life: Evidence from the Prospective Youth Development Study.

Discover Social Science and Health Pub Date : 2022-12-01 Epub Date: 2022-02-25 DOI:10.1007/s44155-022-00006-0
Jeylan T Mortimer, Jeremy Staff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Understanding the determinants of subjective or self-rated health (SRH) is of central importance because SRH is a significant correlate of actual health as well as mortality. A large body of research has examined the correlates, antecedents, or presumed determinants of SRH, usually measured at a given time or endpoint. In the present study, we investigate whether individual mastery, a prominent indicator of agency, has a positive effect on SRH over a broad span of the life course. Drawing on longitudinal data from the Youth Development Study (n=741), we examine the impacts of mastery on SRH over a 24-year period (from ages 21-22 to 45-46). The findings of a fixed effects analysis, controlling time-varying educational attainment, unemployment, age, obesity, serious health diagnoses, and time-constant individual differences, lead us to conclude that mastery is a stable predictor of SRH from early adulthood to mid-life. This study provides evidence that psychological resources influence individuals' subjective assessment of their health, even when objective physical health variables and socioeconomic indicators are taken into account.

从成年早期到中年期的代理与主观健康:来自前瞻性青年发展研究的证据。
了解主观或自评健康(SRH)的决定因素至关重要,因为 SRH 是实际健康和死亡率的重要相关因素。大量研究都对 SRH 的相关因素、前因或假定决定因素进行了研究,这些因素通常是在特定时间或终点测量的。在本研究中,我们调查了个人主观能动性这一重要指标是否会在生命过程的大跨度中对性健康和生殖健康产生积极影响。我们利用青年发展研究的纵向数据(n=741),研究了掌握能力在 24 年内(从 21-22 岁到 45-46 岁)对性健康和生殖健康的影响。在控制了随时间变化的教育程度、失业率、年龄、肥胖、严重健康诊断和随时间变化的个体差异后,固定效应分析的结果使我们得出结论,掌握程度是成年早期到中年时期性健康和生殖健康的稳定预测因素。本研究提供的证据表明,即使考虑到客观的身体健康变量和社会经济指标,心理资源也会影响个人对自身健康的主观评估。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Discover Social Science and Health
Discover Social Science and Health intersection of health and social sciences-
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
21
审稿时长
22 days
期刊介绍: Discover Social Science and Health is an interdisciplinary, international journal that publishes papers at the intersection of the social and biomedical sciences. Papers should integrate, in both theory and measures, a social perspective (reflecting anthropology, criminology, economics, epidemiology, policy, sociology, etc) and a concern for health (mental and physical). Health, broadly construed, includes biological and other indicators of overall health, symptoms, diseases, diagnoses, treatments, treatment adherence, and related concerns. Drawing on diverse, sound methodologies, submissions may include reports of new empirical findings (including important null findings) and replications, reviews and perspectives that construe prior research and discuss future research agendas, methodological research (including the evaluation of measures, samples, and modeling strategies), and short or long commentaries on topics of wide interest. All submissions should include statements of significance with respect to health and future research. Discover Social Science and Health is an Open Access journal that supports the pre-registration of studies. Topics Papers suitable for Discover Social Science and Health will include both social and biomedical theory and data. Illustrative examples of themes include race/ethnicity, sex/gender, socioeconomic, geographic, and other social disparities in health; migration and health; spatial distribution of risk factors and access to healthcare; health and social relationships; interactional processes in healthcare, treatments, and outcomes; life course patterns of health and treatment regimens; cross-national patterns in health and health policies; characteristics of communities and neighborhoods and health; social networks and treatment adherence; stigma and disease progression; methodological studies including psychometric properties of measures frequently used in health research; and commentary and analysis of key concepts, theories, and methods in studies of social science and biomedicine. The journal welcomes submissions that draw on biomarkers of health, genetically-informed and neuroimaging data, psychophysiological measures, and other forms of data that describe physical and mental health, access to health care, treatment, and related constructs.
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