Social inequalities in reception of social welfare support: A population based twin study
Sammanfattning
Social welfare support runs in families. Recent studies using Nordic registry data have found
individual
differences in genetic factors to be of substantial importance for medical benefits. However, to date
there has
been no genetically informative studies on receiving social welfare support. To prevent young adults
to not
drop out of the work life and become recipients of social welfare support, it is of substantial interest
to
clarify to what extent the familiarity of social welfare support is due to genetic or social differences
between
families. We used data from the Historical-Event Database on 7,698 Norwegian twins born 1967-1979
to
estimate the relative contribution of genetic factors, the effective familial environment (i.e. the
"shared
environment"), and individual-specific environmental factors. We found that the two forms of familial
risk,
genetic and shared environmental, explained 39% and 45%, respectively, of the risk for receiving
social
welfare support among young Norwegian twins. Only 17% of the variance in risk factors could be
explained
by individual-specific risk factors. It appears that risk for receiving social welfare support can to a
great
extent be explained by environmental differences between families. Therefore prevention strategies
targeting
social inequalities between families would indeed be effective. Furthermore, genetic risk factors are
also
important in explaining risk for receiving social welfare support. These effects could be mediated
through
heritable traits related to substance abuse, psychiatric disorders, and personality. Individual-specific
risk factors
were of very little importance. Hence, with regard to receiving social welfare support, family matters.