Developing Health Lifestyle Pathways and Social Inequalities Across Early Childhood
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-1-2021
Publication Title
Population Research and Policy Review
Volume
40
Issue
5
First page number:
1085
Last page number:
1117
Abstract
Lifestyles are a long-theorized aspect of social inequalities that root individual behaviors in social group differences. Although the health lifestyle construct is an important advance for understanding social inequalities and health behaviors, research has not theorized or investigated the longitudinal development of health lifestyles from infancy through the transition to school. This study documented children’s longitudinal health lifestyle pathways, articulated and tested a theoretical framework of health lifestyle development in early life, and assessed associations with kindergarten cognition, socioemotional behavior, and health. Latent class analyses identified health lifestyle pathways using the US Early Childhood Longitudinal Study—Birth Cohort (ECLS-B; N ≈ 6550). Children’s health lifestyle pathways were complex, combining healthier and unhealthier behaviors and changing with age. Social background prior to birth was associated with health lifestyle pathways, as were parents’ resources, health behaviors, and nonhealth-focused parenting. Developing health lifestyle pathways were related to kindergarten cognition, behavior, and health net of social background and other parent influences. Thus, family context is important for the development of complex health lifestyle pathways across early childhood, which have implications for school preparedness and thus for social inequalities and well-being throughout life. Developing health lifestyles both reflect and reproduce social inequalities across generations.
Keywords
Early childhood; ECLS-B; Health behavior; Health lifestyle; School readiness; Social inequality
Disciplines
Medicine and Health
Language
English
Rights
IN COPYRIGHT. For more information about this rights statement, please visit http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Repository Citation
Mollborn, S.,
Lawrence, E.,
Krueger, P.
(2021).
Developing Health Lifestyle Pathways and Social Inequalities Across Early Childhood.
Population Research and Policy Review, 40(5),
1085-1117.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11113-020-09615-6