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Citation

Kagura, Juliana; Adair, Linda S.; Pisa, Pedro T.; Griffiths, Paula L.; Pettifor, John M.; & Norris, Shane A. (2016). Association of Socioeconomic Status Change between Infancy and Adolescence, and Blood Pressure, in South African Young Adults: Birth to Twenty Cohort. BMJ Open, 6(3), e008805. PMCID: PMC4823398

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Social epidemiology models suggest that socioeconomic status (SES) mobility across the life course affects blood pressure. The aim of this study was to investigate the association between SES change between infancy and adolescence, and blood pressure, in young adults, and the impact of early growth on this relationship.
SETTING: Data for this study were obtained from a 'Birth to Twenty' cohort in Soweto, Johannesburg, in South Africa.
PARTICIPANTS: The study included 838 Black participants aged 18 years who had household SES measures in infancy and at adolescence, anthropometry at 0, 2, 4 and 18 years of age and blood pressure at the age of 18 years.
METHODS: We computed SES change using asset-based household SES in infancy and during adolescence as an exposure variable, and blood pressure and hypertension status as outcomes. Multivariate linear and logistic regressions were used to investigate the associations between SES change from infancy to adolescence, and age, height and sex-specific blood pressure and hypertension prevalence after adjusting for confounders.
RESULTS: Compared to a persistent low SES, an upward SES change from low to high SES tertile between infancy and adolescence was significantly associated with lower systolic blood pressure (SBP) at the age of 18 years (

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2015-008805

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2016

Journal Title

BMJ Open

Author(s)

Kagura, Juliana
Adair, Linda S.
Pisa, Pedro T.
Griffiths, Paula L.
Pettifor, John M.
Norris, Shane A.

PMCID

PMC4823398

ORCiD

Adair - 0000-0002-3670-8073