How The Physiological Effects Of Poverty On Young Children Takes Its Toll On Health
Main Category: Pediatrics / Children's HealthAlso Included In: Public Health; Psychology / Psychiatry; Anxiety / Stress
Article Date: 08 Nov 2007 - 4:00 PDT
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Scientists have known for years that people living in poverty have poorer health and shorter life spans than the more affluent. Now, Cornell University researchers have identified several key mechanisms in 13-year-olds that may help explain how low socio-economic status takes its toll on health.
In the first longitudinal study on the physiological effects of poverty in young children, the Cornell researchers report that the longer 13-year-olds have lived in poverty, the less efficient their bodies become in handling environmental demands.
"We think that these mechanisms may be related to the fact that children who grow up in poverty have a steeper life trajectory of premature health problems than other children, regardless of their socio-economic status in adulthood," said Gary Evans, the Elizabeth Lee Vincent Professor of Human Ecology and professor of human development and of design and environmental analysis in Cornell's College of Human Ecology.
His study, co-authored with graduate student Pilyoung Kim, is published in the November issue of Psychological Science.
"These muted responses of stress regulatory mechanisms, which are part of the cardiovascular system, not only compromise the ability of the adolescents' bodies to respond to such stressors as noise, poor housing and family turmoil but also indicate they are suffering from more stress-induced physiological strain on their organs and tissues than other young people," said Evans.
"People need to understand that not leveling the playing field when it comes to poverty costs everyone money," Evans added. "It's very costly to society that low-income children end up getting sick prematurely and die younger than other people."
Many researchers over the years have shown that childhood poverty affects long-term morbidity (frequency of illnesses and diseases) and mortality, yet no one knows why.
The researchers assessed the neuroendocrine and cardiovascular markers of stress regulatory systems by measuring overnight levels of a stress hormone (cortisol) and blood pressure reactivity and recovery after an acute stressor (being asked unexpectedly to do mental math problems) in 217 low- and middle-income white adolescents -- at age 9 and then again at age 13 -- in rural areas of upstate New York. They assessed cumulative physical and social risk exposure by measuring crowding, noise and housing quality in conjunction with maternal and youth reports of family turmoil, youth separation from family and exposure to violence.
"The study provides yet another piece of evidence that poverty and other chronic risk factors induce physiological changes that appear to be related to long-term health problems," said Evans, who summarized his findings with policy recommendations before the planning committee of the Robert W. Johnson Foundation Commission to Build a Healthier America, Oct. 17, at the Brookings Institution in Washington, D.C.
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Source: Nicola Pytell
Cornell University Communications
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Why?
posted by Theresa Rodriguez on 4 Jan 2009 at 7:13 amHow about because poverty level people do not get the same nutrition that most middle class or above people get. They have to buy meat with a higher fat content because it's cheaper and more affordable. They have to wait and look for things to be on sale (like stale bake goods). It is a blight on society, the way we have so may poor in our own country yet w open our borders to help the poor in other countries before taking care of our own back yard.
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