Some days it feels like more than half of the journal articles I encounter report data suggesting that poverty is associated with some disease entity. I realize that young postgraduates are under some pressure to publish, but I’m ready for a break. I and most pediatricians already know, or at least have assumed, that in general and with few exceptions unwellness and poverty are closely linked. Whether that association is causal or not is a more interesting question. The answer, I suspect, depends on which health condition we are talking about. For the moment I think we should assume that poverty is more likely a major contributor and not merely a fellow traveler of poor health.
Some other questions: What are we as pediatricians expected to do about poverty? Is awareness sufficient? Should I be content with having an elevated awareness that a certain patient has a given disease because I know his family is economically challenged? Or, conversely, should I be satisfied that I have asked about a family’s economic distress when I have just diagnosed a child with asthma? The answer to those questions is a very personal one for each of us to ponder and may depend on where we feel we can best invest our time and skill set.
Like me, you may feel that the focus of your professional life is better spent diagnosing and treating the collateral damage of poverty and addressing economic inequities in your philanthropic activities and your choices at the polls. On the other hand, you may choose to use your public persona as a physician to more actively address poverty whether it is on a local, national, or global stage. There is no correct answer and a hybrid may work best for you.
On the other hand, while you agree that there is some link between poverty and unwellness, perhaps the issue is overblown and we should pay more attention to other factors such as the sad state of the family in both disadvantaged and advantaged populations. Maybe if we worked harder to foster and support two-parent families the drag of economic disadvantage would be reduced.
I recently encountered a study that explores this very question. Christina Cross, PhD, a postdoctoral fellow in the department of sociology at Harvard University, reports on her soon-to-be-published study of a nationally representative sample in which she found that, using a selection of academic metrics including earned grades, likelihood of grade repetition, and rates of suspension, in low-income families there was no difference in achievement between Black youth raised in single-parent households and Black youth raised in two-parent households. However, in well-off families, Black youth raised in two-parent households had better academic metrics. (“Why living in a two-parent home isn’t a cure-all for Black students.” Christina Cross. The Harvard Gazette. 2021 Jun 3).
I guess few of us are surprised that living in a two-parent household can provide a child with some advantages. However, it is disappointing and again not surprising that poverty can rob a child of these advantages. While it may make us feel like we are doing something when we offer counseling that promotes two-family households, this may be no more valuable than supporting apple pie and motherhood. Dr. Cross concludes that President Biden’s proposed American Families Plan is more likely to succeed than those focused on counseling because it will offer direct financial support with its tax credits and subsidies.*
Let’s hope she is correct.
* This story was updated on July 6, 2021.
Dr. Wilkoff practiced primary care pediatrics in Brunswick, Maine, for nearly 40 years. He has authored several books on behavioral pediatrics, including “How to Say No to Your Toddler.” Other than a Littman stethoscope he accepted as a first-year medical student in 1966, Dr. Wilkoff reports having nothing to disclose. Email him at pdnews@mdedge.com.