Background: Maternal smoking and low socioeconomic status are known to be associated with each other and with longstanding respiratory problems in childhood but their interrelation has received little attention. In this paper, the interrelations is studied using a conceptual hierarchical framework among children aged 0-11 years in a representative sample of British households with children. Method: With data from the family and children study, this paper tested a conceptual hierarchical framework, in which maternal education acting through lone parenthood would influence material hardship and all three would have effects on maternal smoking increasing the risk of children's longstanding respiratory problems. Results: Among children 0-2,...
ObjectiveTo determine how early-life risk factors explain socioeconomic inequalities in persistent a...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...
This thesis comprises a collection of three distinct essays on the relationship between parents’ soc...
SummaryBackgroundIt is generally accepted that maternal smoking has more detrimental effects than pa...
Inequalities in health between socio-economic groups are a major public health concern. The current ...
BACKGROUND: Independent of current socioeconomic status (SES), past maternal SES might influence ast...
Aims: Low socioeconomic status (SES) characterizes smoking and nicotine dependence in adult samples....
Parental socioeconomic position (SEP) is a known determinant of a child’s health. We aimed to invest...
Background: Parenting and parent-child relationships influence children's emotional and social devel...
Parent–child relationships and parenting processes are emerging as potential life course determinan...
Background: The social environment in which children grow up is closely associated with their health...
Objectives: An increasing number of children are born to unmarried parents due to an increase in lon...
The paper is set against the backdrop of the increase in the number of households in the UK in recei...
Compelling evidence suggests a causal relation between parental smoking during and after pregnancy a...
We examined a model of multiple mediating pathways of income poverty, material hardship, parenting f...
ObjectiveTo determine how early-life risk factors explain socioeconomic inequalities in persistent a...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...
This thesis comprises a collection of three distinct essays on the relationship between parents’ soc...
SummaryBackgroundIt is generally accepted that maternal smoking has more detrimental effects than pa...
Inequalities in health between socio-economic groups are a major public health concern. The current ...
BACKGROUND: Independent of current socioeconomic status (SES), past maternal SES might influence ast...
Aims: Low socioeconomic status (SES) characterizes smoking and nicotine dependence in adult samples....
Parental socioeconomic position (SEP) is a known determinant of a child’s health. We aimed to invest...
Background: Parenting and parent-child relationships influence children's emotional and social devel...
Parent–child relationships and parenting processes are emerging as potential life course determinan...
Background: The social environment in which children grow up is closely associated with their health...
Objectives: An increasing number of children are born to unmarried parents due to an increase in lon...
The paper is set against the backdrop of the increase in the number of households in the UK in recei...
Compelling evidence suggests a causal relation between parental smoking during and after pregnancy a...
We examined a model of multiple mediating pathways of income poverty, material hardship, parenting f...
ObjectiveTo determine how early-life risk factors explain socioeconomic inequalities in persistent a...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...
This thesis comprises a collection of three distinct essays on the relationship between parents’ soc...