Having a health disorder in childhood often influences one’s entire trajectory of development, through adolescence and adulthood. This makes it all the more important that policymakers make sure robust resources are in place where they are needed most.
A growing body of research from the United States has been finding significant associations between neighbourhood resources and various aspects of child health, including physical health, early puberty, asthma hospitalizations and need for pediatric care.
Until now, there had been little evidence on the relationship between neighbourhood-level socio-economic conditions and the health of young children starting school in Canada. Specifically, researchers haven’t had a lot of data about neighbourhood conditions and children’s health disorders. Health disorders are often associated with increased special educational needs as children progress through school.
Canada’s free universal health care contributes to a different social and medical care landscape than in the United States. As researchers, we’d assumed this context should minimize the place-based variation. Our research, however, points to jaw-dropping differences in the levels of serious health issues of children from wealthier and poorer neighbourhoods.
Study of kindergarteners
We conducted a population-wide study of kindergarten children attending publicly funded schools between 2004 and 2020 across Canada.
We looked at the association between neighbourhood-level socio-economic status and teacher-reported health disorders. The majority of students in Canada (almost 92 per cent) attend publicly funded schools.
We assessed health disorders using the Early Development Instrument (EDI), a 103-item, teacher-completed questionnaire. The questionnaire measures children’s ability to meet age-appropriate developmental expectations in kindergarten, and includes information about children’s demographics and their health status.
The EDI provides a source that is unparalleled by any other dataset. It features population-level information on children’s school readiness, including insights into child development and health status.
Defining ‘health disorder’
For the purposes of the study, children were considered as having a health disorder if:
- Their teacher reported they had a diagnosed health condition (based on information from a parent or health professional);
- They had a limitation that interfered with their ability to function in the classroom (such as physical, learning, emotional, behavioural, speech or language impairment);
- They received a special needs designation.
We compared that information with data about neighbourhood-level socioeconomic status retrieved from the Canada Revenue Agency’s 2005 Taxfiler database and the 2006 Canadian Census, collected through Statistics Canada.
With colleagues, we created a neighbourhood-level index to examine 2,058 neighbourhoods spanning the whole country. To determine geographic boundaries of areas, we relied on Statistics Canada data pertaining to the smallest geographic areas for which the agency publicizes population and dwelling counts. To assess the socioeconomic status of neighbourhoods, our index considered variables such as such as: the percentage of lone-parent families who have low income and also children under six years of age; the percentage of adults with no high school diploma.
Kindergarteners and health disorders
More than 1.4 million children across Canada participated in the EDI data collections in their kindergarten classrooms between 2004 and 2020. Of those children, 230,021 (16 per cent) had some form of a health disorder. Across all Canadian neighbourhoods, the prevalence of childhood health disorders ranged from about two per cent to 47 per cent, with an average of 17 per cent.
We found a significant association between neighbourhood-level socio-economic status and the prevalence of health disorders, with the occurrence of health disorders increasing as the socio-economic status of a neighbourhood decreased.
Differences in provinces, territories
We also studied this association separately in nine provinces and territories. We learned the association between neighbourhood socio-economic status and the prevalence of health disorders was strongest in Newfoundland and Labrador, and weakest in Québec.
Such variation points to how income inequality — the extent to which income is unevenly distributed in a given area — differs by jurisdiction.
Differences in the association between neighbourhood socioeconomic status and the prevalence of health disorders seen among provinces and territories could be due to several factors, including variations in their early identification of developmental disorders.
Implications for policy and practice
Our findings suggest important implications for policy and practice.
Knowing that the association between the prevalence of health disorders in kindergarten and neighbourhood-level socio-economic status is stronger in some areas of the country than in others can help us identify opportunities to support children in these areas who have health disorders.
It could also even out disparities across provinces. Identifying opportunities to offer support, and mobilizing this support, could improve the outcomes for children with health disorders.
Equitable health supports needed
Our results also suggest that, to reduce or eliminate the health disadvantages associated with poorer neighbourhoods, it’s important to provide equitable public health supports.
These include initiatives for nutrition, housing, access to quality health services and preventive care, especially in lower socioeconomic communities.
Policymakers and researchers alike may need to focus more on children with broadly defined health disorders to ensure they are sufficiently supported. Supports provided — especially in schools — offer a critical opportunity to improve their long-term outcomes.
Caroline Reid-Westoby, Research Associate, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University and Magdalena Janus, Professor, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University
This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.