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Abstract

The socioeconomic and ethnic characteristics of parents are some of the most important correlates of adverse health outcomes in childhood. However, the relationships between ethnic, economic, and behavioral factors and the health outcomes responsible for this pervasive finding have not been specified in child health epidemiology. The general objective of this paper is to propose a theoretical approach to the study of maternal behaviors and child health in diverse ethnic and socioeconomic environments. The specific aims are: (a) to describe a causal pathway between the utility that women obtain through work outside the home and through child care and disease hazard rates in childhood using an optimization model; (b) to specify the influence of ethnic and socioeconomic factors on model constraints; (c) to use the model as a tool to learn about how different combinations of maternal wage labor and child care time might influence child health outcomes in diverse social contexts; (d) to identify parameters that will require measurement in future research; (e) to discuss research strategies that will enable us to obtain these measurements; and (f) to discuss the implications of the model for biostatistical modeling and public health intervention. Optimization models are powerful heuristic tools for understanding how ethnic, environmental, family, and personal characteristics can place important constraints on both the quality and quantity of care that women can provide to their children. They provide a quantitative appreciation for the difficult trade-offs that most women face between working in order to purchase basic goods that children cannot do without (e.g., food, clothing, shelter, health insurance), and increasing offspring well-being through child care (e.g., training in social skills, affection, protection from environmental hazards, help with homework).

Key words  Child health - Maternal work - Optimization model - Trade-offs

The research was funded by a Faculty Scholars Award from the William T. Grant Foundation to A. Magdalena Hurtado.
A. Magdalena Hurtado, Ph.D., is an associate professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico. Her research interests include the origins of the sexual division of labor, epidemiology of indigenous peoples, disease susceptibility, the development and intergenerational transmission of antigens and immune defense, immune function and allergic sensitization, and trauma. She also works on public health interventions, biological capital and poverty, and land tenure and human rights in native communities of South America.
Carol Lambourne, M.Sc., is a doctoral candidate in the Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico. Her research interests are evolutionary models of child and adolescent development, life history theory, family composition and investment patterns, pubertal timing and psychosexual maturation, juvenile stress, and infanticide.
Kim Hill, Ph.D., is a professor in the Department of Anthropology, University of New Mexico. His research interests are modern hunter-gatherers, including extensive fieldwork in lowland South America. Current topics of interest include human evolution, economic strategies, life history theory, the evolution of cooperation, and the emergence of social norms enforced by punishment. He is also involved in economic development, health and education projects with lowland South American native populations.
Karen Kessler received her M.S. in Anthropology from the University of New Mexico in 1996. Her research interests are the application of mathematical modeling to the prevention of diabetes and other causes of morbidity and mortality in historical populations.

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