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Published byTerry Newhall Modified over 10 years ago
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Life Course Socioeconomic Status, Social Context and Cardiovascular Disease: The LCSES Study Kathryn Rose, PhD for The LCSES Study Team
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Background
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LCSES and ARIC Studies As part of the ARIC study, information on mid to later life socioeconomic status (SES) was collected at each of the four examinations As an ancillary study, LCSES collected additional information from surviving participants about earlier life SES circumstances Individual-level SES Place of residence
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LCSES Study Goals Examine the association between SES across the life course and CVD-related outcomes Determine the extent to which the current and historical (neighborhood) context modify the association of individual-level SES exposures and CVD events Identify explanatory mechanisms for the SES- CVD association
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LCSES Questionnaire Administered during 2001-02 ARIC annual telephone follow-up (AFU) 44 questions about childhood and earlier adulthood social exposures Individual-level SES Military Service Place of residence –Used to link participants with historical census data
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LCSES Participants N = 12,716 80.5% of the baseline ARIC participants Approximately 95% of cohort survivors
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LCSES Participant Characteristics 45-49 50-54 55-59 60-64 Black Women Black Men White Women White Men 16.5% 9.0% 40.8% 33.8% 29.5% 27.3% 23.7% 19.7% RACE/GENDER AGE at BASELINE
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Type of Historical Data Collected Individual Level SES
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Individual Level Childhood SES: Mother and father’s (or other caretaker’s) Education Occupation Census-based categories analogous to those used in ARIC study Owner vs. worker Whether or not managed or supervised Home ownership
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Recalled Individual-level SES-Related Attributes in Earlier Adulthood Occupation at ages 30, 40, and 50 Grouped into Bureau of Census Job Categories Characteristics of Job Owner vs. Worker Managerial/Supervisory Home ownership
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Type of Historical Data Collected Contextual Level (Place of Residence)
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Childhood Place of Residence City / County / State of Residence during childhood Data cleaning / editing 3% resided outside of the US 44% resided in the same county as in midlife Linking with county-level census data Chose decennial census (1930, 1940, 1950) that corresponded most closely to where participant lived at 10 years of age Of the 12,314 participants who lived in the US as children, 99% were linked to county-level census data
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Distribution of Participants by Birth Cohort 0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000 3500 4000 ARIC Participant’s Birth Cohort 1921-251926-301931-351936-401941-45 Number
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Place of Residence at Ages 30, 40, and 50 Participants asked to provide their complete street address Goal: link with census tract data from historical census (1960 – 1980) most closely corresponding to the given age Only queried about address for a given age if not already in ARIC at this age
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Progress to Data Strategies for working with complex historical census data have been developed Individual and contextual / neighborhood socio- economic exposure data across the life course has been assembled for study participants Various research projects focusing on cardiovascular disease related outcomes are in progress
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