Résumé :
|
[BDSP. Notice produite par INIST-CNRS R0xq8sEk. Diffusion soumise à autorisation]. Studies of health inequalities in Japan have increased since the millennium. However, there remains a lack of an accepted theory-based classification to measure occupation-related social position for Japan. This study attempts to derive such a classification based on the National Statistics Socio-economic Classification in the UK. Using routinely collected data from the nationally representative Comprehensive Survey of the Living Conditions of People on Health and Welfare, the Japanese Socioeconomic Classification was derived using two variables - occupational group and employment status. Validation analyses were conducted using household income, home ownership, self-rated good or poor health, and Kessler 6 psychological distress (n=36,000). After adjustment for age, marital status, and area (prefecture), one step lower social class was associated with mean 16% (p
|