Parental Education and Adolescents' Asthma: The Role of Ethnicity

Children (Basel). 2023 Jan 31;10(2):267. doi: 10.3390/children10020267.

Abstract

While high parental education is associated with better health, this association may be weaker for ethnic minority than for ethnic majority families. It is unknown whether the association between parental education and adolescents' asthma also varies by ethnicity.

Aim: To study the association between parental education and adolescents' asthma overall and by ethnicity.

Methods: The current study used data from the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health (PATH)-Adolescents study. All participants were 12 to 17-year-old non-smokers (n = 8652). The outcome of interest was adolescents' asthma. The predictor of interest was baseline parental education, the covariates were age, sex, and number of parents present at baseline, and the moderator was ethnicity.

Results: According to logistic regression analyses, higher parental education was predictive of adolescents' asthma; however, this association was weaker for Latino than non-Latino adolescents (OR 1.771; CI 1.282-2.446). We did not find a significant difference in the effect of parental education on asthma of White and African American adolescents. Our stratified models also showed that higher parental education was associated with lower asthma for non-Latino but not for Latino adolescents.

Conclusion: The effect of high parental education on adolescents' asthma prevalence differs between Latino and non-Latino families, with Latino families showing weaker protective effects of parental education on adolescents' asthma. Future research should test the role of exposure to environmental pollutants, neighborhood quality, and prevalence of smoking in social network members as well as other contextual factors at home, in school, and in the neighborhood that may increase prevalence of asthma in Latino adolescents regardless of their parental education. Given that these potential causes are multi-level, potential causes of such disparities should be tested in future multi-level research.

Keywords: adolescents; asthma; ethnic groups; parental education; risk behavior.

Grants and funding

Young-Brinn is supported by a research project funded and supported by the Tobacco-Related Disease Research Program (TRDRP) grant R00RG2347. As a scholar of the Clinical Research Education and Career Development (CRECD) program at Charles R. Drew University of Medicine and Science (CDU), Dr. Adinkrah’s research-related activities were supported by the NIMHD/NIH Award # R25 MD007610.