Las Vegas Review-Journal

Study: Education level, deaths linked

Parents with more school able to access more info

- By Aleksandra Appleton Las Vegas Review-journal

Children whose parents have lower levels of education have a significan­tly higher risk of dying young, according to a new study by researcher­s at UNLV.

The research published in the

July issue of the Maternal and Child Health Journal found that children whose fathers never graduated from high school have a 41 percent higher risk of death before their 25th birthdays compared with children of fathers who earned a college degree.

Maternal secondary education is a nearly equivalent influence: Children of mothers who did not complete high school have a 40 percent chance of dying before 25, according to data collected over a 16-year period from 350,000 children nationwide.

For children whose mothers or fathers attended some college but did not complete it, the risk rates drop to 28 percent and 23 percent, respective­ly, the study found.

The disparitie­s are due to the fact that parents with more education can better access “institutio­nal knowledge and/or social networks” that can result in safer child environmen­ts or be leveraged for better health care, the researcher­s wrote.

They’re more likely to ask questions of their doctors or seek out the most scientific and up-to-date informatio­n on things like safe sleep habits for infants, according to Elizabeth Lawrence, a sociology professor at UNLV and co-author of the study.

“They also have the financial re

sources to buy the newest and safest products,” Lawrence said.

In 2016, accidents like suffocatio­n or drowning were the leading cause of unnatural child deaths in Nevada, with all of the 13 asphyxiati­on deaths related to unsafe sleep environmen­ts, according to a state report.

Lawrence said that more education also could help prevent injury-related mortality, another leading cause of child deaths in the state. Nevada had a high school graduation rate of 80.8 percent for the class of2017,abitundert­henational

average of 84.6 percent.

The research also reinforced the link between mortality and socioecono­mic status, finding that children from families who lived below the poverty line had a 38 percent higher risk of dying over the course of the study, which was done in conjunctio­n with the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the University of Colorado, Boulder.

Previous research has linked mortality rates to ZIP code areas, but little work has been done to explore socioecono­mic disparitie­s on the individual level, according to a release from UNLV.

“Even if you live in a relatively well-educated area, that doesn’t mean that you will have the resources

to buy the most updated car seats, for example,” Lawrence said.

Lawrence said one goal of the study is to spur future research, as well as policies that could help equalize the disparitie­s.

Still, policies alone may not cut it. “People with a socioenomi­c advantage will find a way to protect that advantage,” Lawrence said. “If specific policies are made, those means of success may shift. Better to create broad policies that can address a number of factors affecting families.”

Contact Aleksandra Appleton at 702-383-0218 or aappleton@ reviewjour­nal.com. Follow @aleksapple­ton on Twitter.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal ?? An RTC Las Vegas 109 bus makes its way down South Maryland Parkway north of East Twain Avenue on Saturday.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal An RTC Las Vegas 109 bus makes its way down South Maryland Parkway north of East Twain Avenue on Saturday.
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Elizabeth Lawrence

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