Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study

Abstract Childhood poverty is directly associated with many health outcomes in late life irrespective of youth health and of health system variation. The childhood poor in the United States (U.S.), England and Europe have reported worse cognitive, muscle and mental functions in their fifties to nine...

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Main Author: Gindo Tampubolon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Portfolio 2025-05-01
Series:Scientific Reports
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-99929-2
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author Gindo Tampubolon
author_facet Gindo Tampubolon
author_sort Gindo Tampubolon
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Childhood poverty is directly associated with many health outcomes in late life irrespective of youth health and of health system variation. The childhood poor in the United States (U.S.), England and Europe have reported worse cognitive, muscle and mental functions in their fifties to nineties. But it is not known whether they have higher probabilities of experiencing frailty as their childhood recollections are likely to be erroneous. Nearly 80,000 adults aged 50 and older retrospectively recalled their childhood conditions around ten and underwent prospective examinations to construct their Fried’s frailty phenotype. Childhood conditions in England and Europe included number of books, number of rooms, number of people, presence of running hot or cold water, fixed bath, indoor lavatory and central heating (English Longitudinal Study of Ageing; Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe). In the U.S., these were mostly replaced with financial hardship indicators including having to move because of family debt (Health and Retirement Study). Childhood poverty is a latent construct of error-laced recollection and its distal association with frailty phenotype was estimated with a fixed effects probit model. Sensitivity analyses were conducted using a random effects model and stratifying on sex. Childhood poverty associates with higher probabilities of being frail (0.1097 ± 0.0169, p < 0.001) in 29 countries including U.S., England and Europe. Furthermore, women have higher probabilities of being frail (0.3051 ± 0.0152, p < 0.001). Age, education, wealth, marital status and youth illness exert influences on the probabilities of being frail. Evidence is mounting that childhood can last a life time, affecting cognitive muscle and mental functions, and now frailty. This evidence calls for urgent actions to eliminate child poverty on account of its lifelong rewards.
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spelling doaj-art-a883db2d9e9b46f0bf43be5218dcf5bb2025-08-20T02:11:22ZengNature PortfolioScientific Reports2045-23222025-05-0115111010.1038/s41598-025-99929-2Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective studyGindo Tampubolon0UK NIHR Policy Research Unit on Healthy AgeingAbstract Childhood poverty is directly associated with many health outcomes in late life irrespective of youth health and of health system variation. The childhood poor in the United States (U.S.), England and Europe have reported worse cognitive, muscle and mental functions in their fifties to nineties. But it is not known whether they have higher probabilities of experiencing frailty as their childhood recollections are likely to be erroneous. Nearly 80,000 adults aged 50 and older retrospectively recalled their childhood conditions around ten and underwent prospective examinations to construct their Fried’s frailty phenotype. Childhood conditions in England and Europe included number of books, number of rooms, number of people, presence of running hot or cold water, fixed bath, indoor lavatory and central heating (English Longitudinal Study of Ageing; Survey of Health, Ageing and Retirement in Europe). In the U.S., these were mostly replaced with financial hardship indicators including having to move because of family debt (Health and Retirement Study). Childhood poverty is a latent construct of error-laced recollection and its distal association with frailty phenotype was estimated with a fixed effects probit model. Sensitivity analyses were conducted using a random effects model and stratifying on sex. Childhood poverty associates with higher probabilities of being frail (0.1097 ± 0.0169, p < 0.001) in 29 countries including U.S., England and Europe. Furthermore, women have higher probabilities of being frail (0.3051 ± 0.0152, p < 0.001). Age, education, wealth, marital status and youth illness exert influences on the probabilities of being frail. Evidence is mounting that childhood can last a life time, affecting cognitive muscle and mental functions, and now frailty. This evidence calls for urgent actions to eliminate child poverty on account of its lifelong rewards.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-99929-2U.S.EnglandEuropeChildhood povertyFrailtyLife course
spellingShingle Gindo Tampubolon
Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
Scientific Reports
U.S.
England
Europe
Childhood poverty
Frailty
Life course
title Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
title_full Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
title_fullStr Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
title_short Growing up in poverty, growing old in frailty: the life course shaping of health in the United States, England and Europe—a prospective and retrospective study
title_sort growing up in poverty growing old in frailty the life course shaping of health in the united states england and europe a prospective and retrospective study
topic U.S.
England
Europe
Childhood poverty
Frailty
Life course
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-99929-2
work_keys_str_mv AT gindotampubolon growingupinpovertygrowingoldinfrailtythelifecourseshapingofhealthintheunitedstatesenglandandeuropeaprospectiveandretrospectivestudy