TY - JOUR T1 - Social status and risky health behaviors: results from the health and retirement study. JF - J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci Y1 - 2005 A1 - Linda A. Wray A1 - Duane F. Alwin A1 - Ryan J McCammon KW - Aged KW - Aging KW - Alcohol Drinking KW - Body Weight KW - Exercise KW - Female KW - Health Behavior KW - Humans KW - Life Style KW - Likelihood Functions KW - Logistic Models KW - Longitudinal Studies KW - Male KW - Middle Aged KW - Smoking KW - Social Class KW - United States AB -

OBJECTIVES: We focus on a hypothesized mechanism that may underlie the well-documented link between social status and health-behavioral health risks.

METHODS: We use longitudinal data from representative samples of 6,106 middle-aged and 3,636 older adults from the Health and Retirement Study to examine the relationships between social status-including early life social status (e.g., parental schooling), ascribed social status (e.g., sex, race-ethnicity), and achieved social status (e.g., schooling, economic resources)-and behavioral health risks (e.g., weight, smoking, drinking, physical activity) to (1) assess how early life and ascribed social statuses are linked to behavioral health risks, (2) investigate the role of achieved factors in behavioral health risks, (3) test whether achieved status explains the contributions of early life and ascribed status, and (4) examine whether the social status and health risk relationships differ at midlife and older age.

RESULTS: We find that early life, achieved, and ascribed social statuses strongly predict behavioral health risks, although the effects are stronger in midlife than they are in older age.

DISCUSSION: Ascribed social statuses (and interactions of sex and race-ethnicity), which are important predictors of behavioral health risks even net of early life and achieved social status, should be explored in future research.

PB - 60B VL - 60 Spec No 2 U1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16251597?dopt=Abstract U4 - Social Stratification/Health Behaviors ER -