Disparities in health outcomes by socioeconomic status (SES) are one of the most pressing public health problems our society faces today. In line with PAR-10-136's interest in multi-level approaches to understanding health disparities, we focus on childhood asthma and investigate factors simultaneously across neighborhood, family, and individual levels;we consider both physical environment and social environment exposures together;and we examine various levels of biological processes (organ systems, cellular, genomic) that drive asthma pathophysiology, all within a single project that seeks to develop a more comprehensive understanding of the causes of asthma disparities.
The first aim i s to understand how neighborhood, family, and individual-level social factors both shape and are shaped by one another, and how they collectively affect asthma disparities.
The second aim i s to measure social and physical exposures concurrently in order to explain how they interact to affect asthma disparities.
The third aim i s to create biologically plausible models for how social contexts contribute to health disparities by characterizing pathways at multiple levels biologicall (organ systems, cellular, genomic) that can explain how social contexts come to affect asthma disparities. This study will recruit a sample of 300 families from varying SES backgrounds who have a child ages 10-18 with persistent asthma. Families will participate in laboratory assessments of individual- and family-level social processes as well as child biological measures. Information on neighborhood characteristics will be linked from geographic information system maps of pollution exposures and maps of the social characteristics of communities created by a research consortium locally. In order to establish the temporal precedence of each of the 'levels'of factors, clinical outcomes will be tracked across a 1 year follow up period via monthly monitoring of symptoms as well as from hospitalization data obtained from provincial health records. Creating models that explain how neighborhood, family, and individual factors simultaneously contribute to asthma disparities is critical for developing a more holistic picture of how social contexts affect disease progression. These models will in turn shape our approaches to interventions. For example, interventions to improve medication adherence may not be effective if they do not acknowledge the broader social factors (e.g., neighborhood and family stress) that affect families'abilities to keep up with medication regimens. Assessing interactive effects between factors will also allow us to identify specific conditions under which potential targets of intervention would make the biggest differences in mitigating the pathophysiological processes underlying asthma. The overall goal of this project is to develop a more sophisticated understanding of why asthma disparities by SES exist and to identify the constellation of factors that would need to be targeted simultaneously in order to effectively alleviate these disparities.

Public Health Relevance

Comprehensive, multi-level models that convincingly explain the multitude of ways in which low socioeconomic status (SES) is able to have pervasive effects on health are important for developing interventions that can maximally reduce health disparities. The proposed project will investigate social and physical environment factors across neighborhood, family, and individual levels in an effort to understand disparities by SES in childhood asthma. The overarching goal is to develop more sophisticated models of how social and physical environments affect and interact with one another to contribute to disease progression differentially in low SES children.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
1R01HL108723-01A1
Application #
8262995
Study Section
Health Disparities and Equity Promotion Study Section (HDEP)
Program Officer
Taggart, Virginia
Project Start
2012-09-11
Project End
2017-05-31
Budget Start
2012-09-11
Budget End
2013-05-31
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2012
Total Cost
$350,000
Indirect Cost
$115,277
Name
Northwestern University at Chicago
Department
Psychology
Type
Schools of Arts and Sciences
DUNS #
160079455
City
Evanston
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60201
Manczak, Erika M; Dougherty, Bryn; Chen, Edith (2018) Parental Depressive Symptoms Potentiate the Effect of Youth Negative Mood Symptoms on Gene Expression in Children with Asthma. J Abnorm Child Psychol :
Lam, Phoebe H; Miller, Gregory E; Chiang, Jessica J et al. (2018) One size does not fit all: Links between shift-and-persist and asthma in youth are moderated by perceived social status and experience of unfair treatment. Dev Psychopathol 30:1699-1714
Miller, Gregory E; Chen, Edith; Shalowitz, Madeleine U et al. (2018) Divergent transcriptional profiles in pediatric asthma patients of low and high socioeconomic status. Pediatr Pulmonol 53:710-719
Lam, Phoebe H; Levine, Cynthia S; Chiang, Jessica J et al. (2018) Family obligations and asthma in youth: The moderating role of socioeconomic status. Health Psychol 37:968-978
Chen, Edith; Brody, Gene H; Miller, Gregory E (2017) Childhood close family relationships and health. Am Psychol 72:555-566
Manczak, Erika M; Williams, Deanna; Chen, Edith (2017) The Role of Family Routines in the Intergenerational Transmission of Depressive Symptoms between Parents and their Adolescent Children. J Abnorm Child Psychol 45:643-656
Chen, Edith; Shalowitz, Madeleine U; Story, Rachel E et al. (2017) Parents' childhood socioeconomic circumstances are associated with their children's asthma outcomes. J Allergy Clin Immunol 140:828-835.e2
Schreier, Hannah M C; Chen, Edith (2017) Low-Grade Inflammation and Ambulatory Cortisol in Adolescents: Interaction Between Interviewer-Rated Versus Self-Rated Acute Stress and Chronic Stress. Psychosom Med 79:133-142
Manczak, Erika M; Levine, Cynthia S; Ehrlich, Katherine B et al. (2017) Associations between spontaneous parental perspective-taking and stimulated cytokine responses in children with asthma. Health Psychol 36:652-661
Chen, Edith; Miller, Gregory E; Shalowitz, Madeleine U et al. (2017) Difficult Family Relationships, Residential Greenspace, and Childhood Asthma. Pediatrics 139:

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