ABSTRACT
Although there is increasing evidence of a link between adverse family experiences (AFEs) and long-term health outcomes, few studies have investigated the role of educational attainment in the relationship between AFEs and adult health. The data of this study comes from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). Here, 15,359 samples were analyzed. Ordered logistic regression with interaction terms was used to explore the moderating effect of education on the relationship between AFEs in childhood and adult self-rated health. The self-rated health scores of people with childhood AFEs were significantly lower than of those without them, particularly in the categories of “parents divorced,” “parent died,” “physical abuse,” “domestic conflict,” “parental bias,” “physical and emotional neglect,” “parental physical illness,” ‘parental mental illness,” “family economic hardship,” “experience of starvation,” “lived in an insecure neighborhood,” and “lived in an unhygienic community.” Increases in education level reduced the adverse effects of parental bias and neglect in childhood, but this did not eliminate the negative effect of community’s environment on adult health. This study highlighted the role of the level of education in eliminating health disparities, which can reduce the adverse effects of AFEs on health in adulthood.
Disclosure statement
The views expressed in the submitted article are the authors’ own and not an official position of the institution or the funders.
Abbreviations
CHARLS: China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study; AFEs: adverse family experiences; ACEs: adverse childhood experiences; FAEs: family-related adverse experiences
Availability of data and materials
The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study are available from the official website of CHARLS, http://charls.pku.edu.cn/index/zh-cn.html.
Consent for publication
This manuscript does not contain any individual person’s data in any form.