The utility of the life-course framework to address disparities in child health is based on its ability to integrate the science of child development with the requirements of effective and just public policy. I argue that the life-course framework is best assessed in a historical context and through 4 essential observations. First, early genetic and environmental interactions are complex and influence outcomes in different settings in very different ways. Second, these early-life interactions are themselves subject to considerable later influences and, therefore, may not be highly predictive of later outcomes. Third, the etiologic nature or timing of early-life interactions does not, per se, determine if their life-course effects are amenable to later interventions. Fourth, a highly deterministic view of early-life interactions is not supported by the science and can generate counterproductive approaches to research and policy development. Finally, an alternative approach is proposed on the basis of a “human-capacity” model of the life course that connects the search for underlying basic mechanisms with a policy-based examination of the comparative effectiveness of influences at different developmental stages. This approach suggests an expanded research and policy agenda that might be more capable of generating urgently needed strategies for reducing disparities in child health. Such an approach could ultimately define more comprehensively the power and limits of life-course effects in shaping the social distribution of health outcomes in the real world.
Skip Nav Destination
Article navigation
November 2009
Supplement Articles|
November 01 2009
Confronting Social Disparities in Child Health: A Critical Appraisal of Life-Course Science and Research
Paul H. Wise, MD, MPH
Paul H. Wise, MD, MPH
Center for Policy, Outcomes and Prevention, Department of Pediatrics, School of Medicine, Stanford University, Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, Stanford, California
Search for other works by this author on:
Address correspondence to Paul H. Wise, MD, MPH, Stanford University, Center for Policy, Outcomes and Prevention, CHP/PCOR, 117 Encina Commons, Stanford, CA 94304-6019. E-mail: pwise@stanford.edu
Pediatrics (2009) 124 (Supplement_3): S203–S211.
Article history
Accepted:
July 20 2009
Citation
Paul H. Wise; Confronting Social Disparities in Child Health: A Critical Appraisal of Life-Course Science and Research. Pediatrics November 2009; 124 (Supplement_3): S203–S211. 10.1542/peds.2009-1100H
Download citation file:
0 Comments
Comments Icon
Comments (0)
Sign in
Don't already have an account? Register
Pay-Per-View Access
$25.00
51
Views
0
Citations