Childhood IQ, Social Class, Deprivation, and Their Relationships with Mortality and Morbidity Risk in Later Life: Prospective Observational Study Linking the Scottish Mental Survey 1932 and the Midspan Studies

Objective To investigate how childhood mental ability (IQ) is related to mortality and morbidity risk, when socioeconomic factors are also considered. Methods Participants were from the Midspan studies conducted on adults in the 1970s; 938 Midspan participants were successfully matched with the Scottish Mental Survey 1932 in which children born in 1921 and attending Scottish schools on June 1, 1932, took a cognitive ability test. Mortality, hospital admissions, and cancer incidence in the 25 years after the Midspan screening were investigated in relation to childhood IQ, social class, and deprivation. Results The risk of dying in 25 years was 17% higher for each standard deviation disadvantage in childhood IQ. Adjustment for social class and deprivation category accounted for some, but not all, of this higher risk, reducing it to 12%. Analysis by IQ quartile showed a substantial increased risk of death for the lowest-scoring quarter only. Structural equation modeling indicated that the effect of childhood IQ on mortality was partly indirectly influenced by social factors. Cause-specific mortality or hospital admission showed that lower IQ was associated with higher risks for all cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease. Cause-specific mortality or cancer incidence risk was higher with decreasing IQ for lung cancer. Conclusions Lower childhood IQ was related to higher mortality risk and some specific causes of death or morbidity. Childhood IQ may be considered as a marker for risk of death or illness in later life in similar and complementary ways to social class or deprivation category.

[1]  Lazar Stankov,et al.  Ultimate validity of psychological tests , 1992 .

[2]  I. Deary,et al.  IQ at age 11 and longevity: Results from a follow-up of the Scottish mental survey 1932 , 2003 .

[3]  John Fox,et al.  A Life Course Approach to Chronic Disease Epidemiology , 1998, BMJ.

[4]  V. Carstairs,et al.  Deprivation and health in Scotland. , 1990, Health bulletin.

[5]  Gordon Marshall Social Class in Modern Britain , 1989 .

[6]  D.,et al.  Regression Models and Life-Tables , 2022 .

[7]  G. Smith,et al.  Adverse socioeconomic conditions in childhood and cause specific adult mortality: prospective observational study , 1998, BMJ.

[8]  Peter M. Bentler,et al.  EQS : structural equations program manual , 1989 .

[9]  C. Brayne,et al.  Cognition and survival: an exploration in a large multicentre study of the population aged 65 years and over. , 2001, International journal of epidemiology.

[10]  James A. Mortimer,et al.  Linguistic Ability in Early Life and Longevity: Findings from the Nun Study , 1999 .

[11]  C. Hart,et al.  Cardiorespiratory Disease in Men and Women in Urban Scotland: Baseline Characteristics of the Renfrew/Paisley(Midspan) Study Population , 1995, Scottish medical journal.

[12]  G. Davey Smith,et al.  Relation between number of siblings and adult mortality and stroke risk: 25 year follow up of men in the Collaborative study , 2003, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[13]  I. Deary,et al.  The Scottish mental survey 1932 linked to the Midspan studies: a prospective investigation of childhood intelligence and future health. , 2003, Public health.

[14]  K. Anstey,et al.  Demographic, health, cognitive, and sensory variables as predictors of mortality in very old adults. , 2001, Psychology and aging.

[15]  D. Barker Mothers, Babies and Disease in Later Life , 1994 .

[16]  H. Friedman,et al.  Sociodemographic and psychosocial factors in childhood as predictors of adult mortality. , 1995, American journal of public health.

[17]  G. Holmbeck Toward terminological, conceptual, and statistical clarity in the study of mediators and moderators: examples from the child-clinical and pediatric psychology literatures. , 1997, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[18]  J. Mackenbach,et al.  The size of mortality differences associated with educational level in nine industrialized countries. , 1994, American journal of public health.

[19]  Ian J Deary,et al.  Longitudinal cohort study of childhood IQ and survival up to age 76 , 2001, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[20]  H. Friedman,et al.  Does childhood personality predict longevity? , 1993, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[21]  S. Court Inequalities in health. Report of a research working group. , 1981, Archives of disease in childhood.

[22]  I. Deary,et al.  Birth weight and cognitive function at age 11 years: the Scottish Mental Survey 1932 , 2001, Archives of disease in childhood.

[23]  C. Hart,et al.  The relation between adult height and haemorrhagic and ischaemic stroke in the Renfrew/Paisley study , 2001, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[24]  I. Deary,et al.  Mental ability age 11 years and health status age 77 years. , 2000, Age and ageing.

[25]  M. Gilhooly,et al.  Hospital use by an ageing cohort: an investigation into the association between biological, behavioural and social risk markers and subsequent hospital utilization. , 1998, Journal of public health medicine.

[26]  F. C. Bartlett,et al.  The Scottish council for research in education: the intelligence of Scottish children: a national survey of an age-group , 1934 .

[27]  G. Watt,et al.  Individual social class, area-based deprivation, cardiovascular disease risk factors, and mortality: the Renfrew and Paisley Study. , 1998, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[28]  H. Friedman,et al.  Psychosocial and behavioral predictors of longevity : The aging and death of the “ Termites ” , 2015 .

[29]  G. Watt,et al.  Education and occupational social class: which is the more important indicator of mortality risk? , 1998, Journal of epidemiology and community health.

[30]  Claudio Franceschi,et al.  The Paradoxes of Longevity , 1999, Research and Perspectives in Longevity.

[31]  R. Sternberg,et al.  Intelligence: Knowns and unknowns. , 1996 .

[32]  C. Hart,et al.  Influence of Socioeconomic Circumstances in Early and Later Life on Stroke Risk Among Men in a Scottish Cohort Study , 2000, Stroke.