Study
reveals new wrinkle in Growing U.S. Health
Gap
Newswise, February 5, 2012 — Most studies
that have examined growing levels of health
disparity in the United States have focused
on the gap between the “haves” and the
“have-nots” in terms of socioeconomic
factors such as education and income.
But a new study has found, for the first
time, that health disparities have grown
dramatically among people in the same
socioeconomic groups – often times more than
the disparities have grown between groups.
For example, researchers found that health
disparities between employed and unemployed
men decreased over the course of the study,
while disparities among men who were
employed actually increased.
“People with the same socioeconomic status
differ much more from each other in terms of
health than they did 20 or so years ago,”
said Hui Zheng, lead author of the study and
assistant professor of sociology at Ohio
State University.
“This is an issue that really hasn’t been
studied before and needs to be examined more
closely.”
Zheng conducted the study with Kenneth Land
of Duke University. Their results appear in
the March 2012 issue of the journal Social
Science Research.
The study is based on data from the National
Health Interview Survey for the 24-year
period from 1984 to 2007. The survey, which
includes about 30,000 people each year, is
conducted by the National Center for Health
Statistics.
The survey asked respondents to rate their
own health on a five-point scale from poor
to excellent. While this is a self-report
and not based on any objective health data,
previous studies have shown that
self-reported health status is a good
indicator of objective health and is
actually better at predicting mortality
among the elderly than assessments by
doctors, Zheng said.
For one part of the study, the researchers
separated the respondents into 432 groups
based on various combinations of family
income, education, employment status, age,
race and marital status.
“Health scholars often emphasize
between-groups disparities in health, but
here we found that within-group disparities
often far exceed the between-groups
disparities, and the changes in total health
disparities in the last two decades are
mainly driven by the changes in the
within-group disparities,” Zheng said.
The data from this study can’t say why
within-group health disparities have
increased over the past 24 years. Several
factors may be in play, depending on the
group. For example, the increase in
disparity among employed men may be
partially due to an increase in the number
of men employed only part-time, which may
reduce their access to health care services
compared to full-time employees.
Overall, other studies have suggested that
within-group income instability has
increased over the past decades, due to
declining unionization and increasing number
of people with lower-wage, insecure jobs.
This type of instability may lead to greater
health disparities within groups, he said.
“We need to find out more about how rising
within-group income instability affects
rising within-group health disparities,” he
said.
Zheng said the study identified another
source of the growing health gap in the
overall population, and that has to do with
changes in population composition.
Generally, the researchers found that there
are fewer Americans in groups that enjoy the
best levels of self-rated health. That was
especially true for men. Over the 24 years
of the study, men became increasingly less
likely to be employed, and less likely to
attain middle or upper-income levels – both
of which are associated with less health
disparity.
In contrast, women saw increases in college
attainment, employment rate, and middle and
upper-income attainment, all of which led to
declining health disparities for women in
this time period.
These results show how positive changes in
the nation’s population composition can help
reduce the health gap, Zheng said.
“If we can increase educational attainment
and labor force participation, and increase
social mobility, we will also probably
decrease health disparities in our
population,” he said.
“So, in a sense, economic policy and social
policy can also be viewed as health policy.”