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Family
Income, Education
Impact Teen Obesity, Depression
Depression and obesity
in teens can be affected by a family's income and education level,
says a study by researchers from Brandeis University in Massachusetts
and Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center.
The analysis of more than 15,000
young people in the United States found about a third of the cases
of depression and obesity among those teens could be attributed
to being from families with low incomes or having parents with
low levels of education.
"Socioeconomic status accounts
for a large proportion of the disease burden within the whole
population. To understand youth health and behaviors, the context
in which youth live must be considered," researcher Dr. Elizabeth
Goodman, of Brandeis University, says in a prepared statement.
The study appears in the November
issue of the American Journal of Public Health.
It found lower family income accounted
for 26 percent of depression and 32 percent of obesity cases among
the teens. Lower parental education was associated with 40 percent
of depression and 39 percent of obesity among the teens.
Lower parental education was a
stronger factor than income for both depression and obesity, the
study concluded.
"Education's effect may relate
more to differences in coping styles and other interpersonal skills,
whereas income's effect may be more strongly associated with material
goods and services," Goodman says.
"Obesity and depression represent
critical public health problems for today's youth, because both
are highly prevalent chronic diseases that track into adulthood,"
she says.
More information
Read
a PDF report on Child Obesity
"Public
Health Crisis, Prevention as a Cure"
Related
articles on Child Obesity or Childhood
Obesity
Related
articles on Overweight Children
Here's where you can learn more
about childhood
obesity.
Reference
Source 101
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