Parental education as an indicator of socioeconomic status: Improving quality of data by requiring consistency across measurement occasions

Author:

Aarø Leif Edvard1,Flisher Alan J.2,Kaaya Sylvia3,Onya Hans4,Namisi Francis S.5,Wubs Annegreet5

Affiliation:

1. Research Centre for Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway, Division of Mental Health, Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Oslo, Norway, leif.aaro@psych.uib.no

2. Research Centre for Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway, Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Adolescent Health Research Institute, University of Cape Town, South Africa

3. Department of Psychiatry, Muhimbili University College of Health Sciences, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania

4. Health Promotion Unit, School of Health Sciences, University of Limpopo, Turfloop Campus, Polokwane, South Africa

5. Research Centre for Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway

Abstract

Aims: Adolescents' reports of parents' education are sometimes used as indicators of socioeconomic status in surveys of health behaviour. The quality of such measurements is questionable. We hypothesized that consistent reporting of parents' education across measurement occasions in prospective panel studies indicates a higher quality of data than single or inconsistent reports. Methods: A multi-site, prospective panel study (three measurement occasions) was carried out among adolescents in Cape Town and Mankweng (South Africa), and Dar es Salaam (Tanzania). Analyses were based on data from students participating at baseline and with a valid code for school number (n = 15,684). Results: For Cape Town and Dar es Salaam students, the associations between parents' education and an alternative indicator of socioeconomic status (both measured at baseline) increased with increasing consistency of reports about parents' education across measurement occasions. For Cape Town, the associations of father's education with a range of behavioural and social cognition variables were significantly stronger among ``consistent'' than among other students. The pattern was the same for mother's education, but with fewer significant interaction effects. Conclusions: Requiring consistency of reports across data-collection occasions may, under the right combination of circumstances, make a difference. Insignificant and ``close to zero'' associations may turn out to be at least moderately strong and statistically significant. When applying indicators of socioeconomic status, such as parents' highest level of completed education, it is most advantageous to use data from prospective panel studies, and to check for consistency of answers across measurement occasions.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,General Medicine

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