Back to Search Start Over

Understanding income-related differences in distribution of child growth, behaviour and development using a cross-sectional sample of a clinical cohort study

Authors :
Michael Peer
Tara Kiran
Mary Beth Derocher
Margarita Lam-Antoniades
Peter Szatmari
Gerald Lebovic
Vincent Hildebrand
Arjumand Siddiqi
Peter Jüni
Christopher Allen
Julia Thompson
Charlie Guiang
Kevin Thorpe
Marty Perlmutar
Douglas Campbell
Andreas Laupacis
Curtis Handford
Suzanne Turner
Christine Koroshegyi
Jonathon L Maguire
Eric Duku
Caroline Reid-Westoby
Magdalena Janus
Catherine S. Birken
Jonathon L. Maguire
Ronald Cohn
Eddy Lau
Patricia C. Parkin
Michael Salter
Laura N. Anderson
Cornelia M. Borkhoff
Charles Keown-Stoneman
Christine Kowal
Dalah Mason
Murtala Abdurrahman
Kelly Anderson
Gordon Arbess
Jillian Baker
Tony Barozzino
Sylvie Bergeron
Dimple Bhagat
Gary Bloch
Joey Bonifacio
Ashna Bowry
Caroline Calpin
Sohail Cheema
Elaine Cheng
Brian Chisamore
Evelyn Constantin
Karoon Danayan
Paul Das
Anh Do
Kathleen Doukas
Anne Egger
Allison Farber
Amy Freedman
Sloane Freeman
Sharon Gazeley
Dan Ha
Laura Hanson
Lukasz Jagiello
Gwen Jansz
Paul Kadar
Florence Kim
Holly Knowles
Bruce Kwok
Sheila Lakhoo
Denis Leduc
Fok-Han Leung
Alan Li
Patricia Li
Jessica Malach
Roy Male
Vashti Mascoll
Aleks Meret
Maya Nader
Katherine Nash
Sharon Naymark
James Owen
Kifi Pena
Navindra Persaud
Andrew Pinto
Michelle Porepa
Vikky Qi
Danyaal Raza
Alana Rosenthal
Katherine Rouleau
Caroline Ruderman
Michael Sgro
Hafiz Shuja
Susan Shepherd
Barbara Smiltnieks
Stephen Treherne
Fatima Uddin
Meta van den Heuvel
Joanne Vaughan
Thea Weisdorf
Sheila Wijayasinghe
Peter Wong
John Yaremko
Ethel Ying
Elizabeth Young
Michael Zajdman
Farnaz Bazeghi
Vincent Bouchard
Marivic Bustos
Charmaine Camacho
Dharma Dalwadi
Tarandeep Malhi
Sharon Thadani
Laurie Thompson
Mary Aglipay
Imaan Bayoumi
Sarah Carsley
Katherine Cost
Karen Eny
Laura Kinlin
Jessica Omand
Shelley Vanderhout
Leigh Vanderloo
Bryan Boodhoo
Olivia Chan
David W.H. Dai
Judith Hall
Rita Kandel
Michelle Rodrigues
Hilde Vandenberghe
Patricia Raso
Amanda Offord
Faraz V Shahidi
Anne Fuller
Laura N Anderson
Catherine Birken
Charles D G Keown-Stoneman
Gurpreet Lakhanpal
Shannon Weir-Seeley
Sheila Jacobson LeahHarrington
Rosemary Moodie EliseMok
Noor Ramji NasreenRamji
Vanna Schiralli JanetSaunderson
Carolyn Taylor CinnthaSrikanthan
Pamela Ruth Flores
Mateenah Jaleel
Ataat Malick
Michelle Mitchell
Martin Ogwuru
Frank Ong
Rejina Rajendran
Audra Stitt KarenPope
Source :
BMJ Open, Vol 12, Iss 2 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectivesChildren from low-income households are at an increased risk of social, behavioural and physical health problems. Prior studies have generally relied on dichotomous outcome measures. However, inequities may exist along the range of outcome distribution. Our objective was to examine differences in distribution of three child health outcomes by income categories (high vs low): body mass index (BMI), behaviour difficulties and development.Design and settingThis was a cross-sectional study using data from a primary care-based research network with sites in three Canadian cities, and 15 practices enrolling participants.Participants, independent variable and outcomesThe independent variable was annual household income, dichotomised at the median income for Toronto (ResultsWe included data from 1628 (zBMI), 649 (SDQ) and 1405 (ITC) children. Children with lower family income had a higher risk distribution for all outcomes. For all outcomes, thecounterfactual distribution, which represented the distribution of children with lower-income who were assigned the predictor profile of the higher-income group, was more favourable than their observed distributions.ConclusionComparing the distributions of child health outcomes and understanding different risk profiles for children from higher-income and lower-income groups can offer a deeper understanding of inequities in child health outcomes. These methods may offer an approach that can be implemented in larger datasets to inform future interventions.

Details

ISSN :
20446055
Volume :
12
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ open
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1c546f2e31e1a7041acf2a40fc0061eb