Author:
LUPIEN S. J.,KING S.,MEANEY M. J.,MCEWEN B. S.
Abstract
It is well known that individuals from more advantaged social classes enjoy better mental and
physical health than do individuals within lower classes. Various mechanisms have been evoked to
explain the association between socioeconomic status (SES) and health. One mechanism that has
received particular attention in recent years is stress. It has been shown that individuals lower in
SES report greater exposure to stressful life events and a greater impact of these events on their
life than individuals higher in SES. In order to measure whether the development of the
relationship between SES and mental health is sustained by exposure to high levels of
glucocorticoids, we measured morning salivary cortisol levels as well as cognitive function
(memory, attention, and language) in 307 children (from 6 to 16 years of age) from low versus
high SES in the Montreal area in Canada. The results revealed that low SES children from 6 to 10
years old present significantly higher salivary cortisol levels when compared to children from high
SES. This difference disappears at the time of school transition, and no SES differences are
observed in salivary cortisol levels during high school. However, children from low and high SES
do not differ with regard to memory or to attentional and linguistic functions. Also, mothers of
low SES children reported higher feelings of depression and more unhealthy behaviors, while
mothers of high SES children reported higher stress related to work or family transitions.
Altogether, these results show that low SES in young children is related to increased cortisol
secretion, although the impact of SES on cortisol secretion is absent after transition to high
school. These data are interpreted within the context of the equalization process of class
patterning. Four social explanatory factors are suggested to explain the disappearance of SES
differences in basal cortisol levels after school transition, taking into account the influence of
family environment on the child's secretion of stress hormones.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
477 articles.
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