Status, despair, and epigenetic age acceleration: Chains of risk?

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q3 DEMOGRAPHY
Biodemography and Social Biology Pub Date : 2025-07-01 Epub Date: 2025-07-29 DOI:10.1080/19485565.2025.2539691
Aniruddha Das
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Biological age acceleration predicts multiple "diseases of aging." Objective and subjective social statuses have both been prospectively linked to this outcome. An established chain-of-risk framework suggests that "effects" of each may be mediated by one's subsequent structural position. A separate deaths-of-despair literature identifies a person's sense of futility as another potential link. Such chains remain underexplored. The current study used data from three waves (2008-2016) of the Health and Retirement Study (HRS) to fill these gaps. The analysis was done through a counterfactual regression-with-residuals (RWR) approach. Asimulated decline in a person's objective but not subjective status predicted their age acceleration 8 years later. Contrary to chain-of-risk conceptions, intermediate social standing did not channel effects. Neither did despair. Findings were more consistent with a direct "material shocks" explanation for status-aging linkages than an indirect or psychosocial one. Implications for aging theory and for interventions are discussed.

地位、绝望和表观遗传年龄加速:风险链?
生物年龄加速预示着多种“衰老疾病”。客观和主观的社会地位都被认为与这一结果有关。一个已建立的风险链框架表明,每个风险链的“影响”可能由其随后的结构位置来调节。另一篇关于绝望死亡的文献认为,一个人的无用感是另一种潜在的联系。这样的连锁仍未得到充分开发。目前的研究使用了健康与退休研究(HRS)的三波(2008-2016)数据来填补这些空白。分析是通过反事实的残差回归(RWR)方法完成的。一个人的客观而非主观状态的模拟下降预测了他们8年后的年龄加速。与风险链的概念相反,中间社会地位没有通道效应。也没有绝望。研究结果更符合直接的“物质冲击”解释,而不是间接的或社会心理的。对老龄化理论和干预措施的影响进行了讨论。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Biodemography and Social Biology is the official journal of The Society for the Study of Social Biology, devoted to furthering the discussion, advancement, and dissemination of knowledge about biological and sociocultural forces affecting the structure and composition of human populations. This interdisciplinary publication features contributions from scholars in the fields of sociology, demography, psychology, anthropology, biology, genetics, criminal justice, and others. Original manuscripts that further knowledge in the area of social biology are welcome, along with brief reports, review articles, and book reviews.
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