“Fundamental Causes” of Social Inequalities in Mortality: A Test of the Theory
Issues Research · Statistical Service · +3 more institutions
Abstract
Medicine and epidemiology currently dominate the study of the strong association between socioeconomic status and mortality. Socioeconomic status typically is viewed as a causally irrelevant "confounding variable" or as a less critical variable marking only the beginning of a causal chain in which intervening risk factors are given prominence. Yet the association between socioeconomic status and mortality has persisted despite radical changes in the diseases and risk factors that are presumed to explain it. This suggests that the effect of socioeconomic status on mortality essentially cannot be understood by reductive explanations that focus on current mechanisms. Accordingly, Link and Phelan (1995) proposed…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 11.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 54
Authors
5Topics & keywords
- Socioeconomic status
- Confounding
- Demography
- Social class
- Epidemiology
- Population
- Medicine
- Psychology